(BTW, I'm somewhat annoyed that all the iPhone 13 reviews are 80% about the cameras. If I want to buy a camera, I'll buy a camera. Don't make my phone bigger and heavier to make a non-camera more camera-like. My iPhone current 8 and I think even my previous iPhone 6 already take excellent photos.)

Nevertheless, the iPhone 13 has an impressive macro as well.

I'm just saying that if macro is your thing, you don't need to invest more than $250 (and you also get a 9:1 108mp large sensor camera).


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The macro camera on the Xiaomi Redmi Note 10 pro is a 5mp sensor - OmmiVision OV05675-GA4A, it is a 1/5 inch sensor and I would not even call any mobile phone sensor large sensor camera as the largest one are not even 1 inch in size.

the 5mp sensor on redmi note pro outputs a 10 bit bit depth rather than 12 bit on iPhone 13 pro. Bottom line is spec wise they are better than the macro sensor in redmi. Marketing spec often lead consumer to believe in advertised numbers, just see for yourself which image you like better and your budget then make your choice dun let the specs cloud the decision. There are a lot of other aspect that goes into good macro shots other than the camera.

The LowePro PhotoSport Outdoor is a camera pack for photographers who also need a well-designed daypack for hiking and other outdoor use. If that sounds like you, the PhotoSport Outdoor may be a great choice, but as with any hybrid product, there are a few tradeoffs.

If you want a compact camera that produces great quality photos without the hassle of changing lenses, there are plenty of choices available for every budget. Read on to find out which portable enthusiast compacts are our favorites.

What's the best camera for travel? Good travel cameras should be small, versatile, and offer good image quality. In this buying guide we've rounded-up several great cameras for travel and recommended the best.

Above $2500 cameras tend to become increasingly specialized, making it difficult to select a 'best' option. We case our eye over the options costing more than $2500 but less than $4000, to find the best all-rounder.

Hi there, after installing the new MIUI 13 update my camera keep crashing. When I take a picture it kinda goes to gallery, but immediately closes the app without saving a photo. I hope the fix will be live soon.

Hi, I've had a Note 9 Pro for the past two months, I took a selfie today and noticed that the photo is filtered, I fucking hate filters !!! Does anybody know if the filter can be somehow disabled? I checked the settings and found nothing. Otherwise the freaking frontal camera is useless for me.

In these tests we shoot a selection of images in pitch-black darkness as well as with city lights in the background providing some illumination. We shoot sample images with the camera at default settings in both flash-auto and flash-off modes. We analyze all image quality attributes but we pay particular attention to exposure, autofocus, and color. We do not test night modes that have to be activated manually.

In these tests we analyze the performance of the ultra-wide camera at several focal lengths from 12 to 20 mm. We look at all image quality attributes, but we pay particular attention to such artifacts as chromatic aberrations, lens softness, and distortion.

In these tests we analyze residual motion when handholding the camera during recording, as well as when walking and running with the camera. We also look for stabilization artifacts such as jello effect, sharpness differences between frames, and frame shift (abrupt changes of framing).

The Redmi Note 11 has a fairly standard budget camera setup at its disposal. One we have actually seen in some capacity or another, perhaps with slight alterations on other recent Xiaomi devices. It has a 50MP main snapper on the back with simple PDAF, alongside an 8MP ultrawide, 2MP macro and 2MP depth cameras. On the front - a 13MP selfie. All of these with fixed focus and no notable extra features.

As we already mentioned, one of the bigger disappointments in the camera department is the Redmi Note 11's video capture limit of 1080p, courtesy of the ISP on the Snapdragon 680 chipset. Unfortunately, a limit shared with many of its "Pro" sibling models, but one notably not present on last year's Redmi Note 10.

The 50MP primary camera uses the Samsung S5KJN1 sensor (1/2.76" size and 0.64 m individual pixels) - a fairly-popular unit we've seen in quite a few other devices like the Xiaomi Redmi 10, Poco M4 Pro 5G, Realme 8i, Realme 9i, Samsung Galaxy A23 and the Motorola Moto G21, G51 and G71, to name a few. It's a decent piece of hardware, but one that has never really managed to impress us with its real-world quality. It is a Quad-Bayer unit and outputs stills in 12.5MP by default. It just offers basic phase detection autofocus, no OIS, and the Redmi Note 11 has it is sitting behind a 26mm, f/1.8 lens. Nothing too fancy.

The 13MP selfie camera is nothing to phone home about either. It is based on the Samsung S5K3L6 sensor (1/3.1" size and 1.12 m individual pixels) and has a rather dark f/2.4 lens. No autofocus or anything fancy for it either.

The camera app is a rather straightforward implementation, though it does have its quirks. First, basic operation for changing modes works with side swipes (on the black bezel!), and you can also tap on the modes you can see to switch to those directly. Up and down swipes don't work for switching between the front and rear cameras; only the toggle next to the shutter release does that.

On the near end, you have the camera zoom switch that operates in one of two fashions. The first is simply tapping on one of the three dots representing the ultra-wide, primary, and 2x digital options. Or you can tap on the active magnification and slide sideways to reveal even more zoom levels - 2x and 10x, plus a slider for intermediate magnifications.

There's a nicely capable Pro mode, where you can tweak the shooting parameters yourself. Unlike some of Xiaomi's other models, Pro mode is only available on the main and ultrawide cameras on the Redmi Note 11.

You get to pick one of 4 white balance presets or dial in the light temperature with a slider, there's a manual focusing slider (with peaking as an option), and shutter speed (1/4000s to 30s/15s/0.25s for main/ultrawide/macro) and ISO control with the range depending on which camera you're using. A tiny live histogram is available, and a toggle for zebras can be found in the hamburger menu.

The main camera captures 12.5MP stills by default. These look decent, particularly for a budget device, but are nothing to phone home about. Colors look nice and true to life, and there is a good amount of detail in the shots. They are not overly soft either, even around the far corners of the frame. Contrast isn't bad either.

On the flip side, these shots are a bit noisier than we would have liked. The sky and other uniform surfaces tend to look grainy. Dynamic range isn't stellar either, and the camera has a tendency to underexpose a bit and produce darker shots.

The main camera can pull-off a pretty decent portrait shot. Subject detection and separation are almost perfect. The artificial bokeh is pleasant too. Detail is plenty, and there is very little noise to speak of. Portrait mode also works just as well on non-human subjects.

Honestly, the main gripes we have with these portraits are actually gripes with the rather limited dynamic range of the main camera itself and its tendency to underexpose, which frequently crushes detail in the shadows.

At 2x shots look surprisingly good, perhaps even slightly better than 1x shots from the main camera since there appears to be more noise reduction going on. Even so, the photos still manage to retain plenty of detail and don't look overly soft. Colors are nice and natural, just like in 1x shots.

Shots from the 8MP ultrawide camera are a bit of a letdown, particularly since we've seen much better performance from 8MP ultrawides on recent Xiaomi devices. Even budget ones. While still mostly usable at a 1:1 zoom level, these stills are processed in an aggressive way. Most fine detail actually picked up and recognized by the algorithms is aggressively oversharpened and even distorted to the point of pixelization. That leaves behind a mess of smeary and blurry "blobs" for things like far away foliage and surfaces alongside pixelated "detail".

At least the ultrawide seems to expose a bit better than the main camera, resulting in slightly brighter shots. Though the dynamic range is even more limited here, as expected, and that still frequently ends up being detrimental to detail in shadows.

Last and probably least, rounding out the rear cameras on the Redmi Note 11, we have the 2MP dedicated macro camera. Despite its diminutive size, low resolution, fixed focus and dim lens, it actually captures surprisingly detailed and usable shots. Colors look just fine. The fixed focus is quite forgiving.

Shots from the 13MP selfie camera are all-around solid. Detail is great. Colors look natural. Even though the focus is fixed, just like with the macro cam, the focal plane is nice and wide and forgiving.

There is some noise in the frame, but it's hardly bothersome. The only important detail to note here is that you pretty much always want HDR set to auto. Or rather never want to shoot with it disabled since the background just gets horribly overexposed and practically erased.

The main camera captures what can best be described as usable but unimpressive shots. Good enough for a budget device, mostly thanks to the laid-back noise suppression, which leaves behind plenty of noise but also doesn't destroy detail in the process. Colors look decent and true to life as well.

Low-light shots from the 8MP ultrawide camera are pretty disappointing. At least you can make out what is in the shot, but beyond that, these are quite soft and dark. At least the aggressive overprocessing and pixelization artifacts from daylight ultrawide shots appear to be absent in low-light. Either the algorithms are struggling to actually find something to oversharpen, or we just can't notice the damage in the final photo. ff782bc1db

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