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I've already written that Nokia Smart Cam is my default camera application on Windows Phone 8. Or rather it was - and only for shots in bright light, outdoors. Not unexpectedly, Nokia Smart Cam's burst system, with very short exposures, leads to disastrous results indoors and in dim light. Leading me to explore the exact trade-offs in quality under different conditions for the three main camera applications supplied on Nokia's Windows Phone - when should you use the Microsoft-written default application and when should you opt for nothing less than Nokia Pro Camera? There are obvious operational differences between the three applications that you get with most Nokia top end Lumia smartphones, of course: Pros and cons all round then, but what I wanted to know is what the relative photo quality was, i.e. which application provided the best balance of quality versus convenience/suitability. Notes: It's your typical snap of a person, out in the fresh air and sunlight - it should be no problem for all three camera applications: Let's crop in on the same shot as taken by Nokia Pro Camera, Nokia Smart Camera and the Windows Phone default Camera applications (click the links to each to download the JPG originals): Now this is very telling - in the central crop, Nokia Smart Cam, while fine for 'fun' shots of people up close (its strong point), simply hasn't got the quality and detail to match the other two applications for any more static shots. Although the resolutions of all three photos are the same, at 5 megapixels, the differences in quality are like night and day. Smart Cam's ultra-fast (seemingly low-res) reading of the sensor produces results that are typical of a budget phone and, for this type of use, obviously disappointing. Windows Phone Camera's shot is much better and contains detail, but the IQ is relatively low, especially in terms of dynamic range and colour accuracy, two factors in which which Nokia Pro Camera's oversampling of the 41MP sensor does a much better job. Taking the light levels down one notch, this indoor museum portion was lit by both skylights and some artificial lighting: Let's crop in on the same shot as taken by Nokia Pro Camera, Nokia Smart Camera and the Windows Phone default Camera applications (click the links to each to download the JPG originals): Again we see that Nokia Pro Camera produces the best result, with better colour accuracy, best resolved detail and best dynamic range, as you'd expect. The 'straight down the line' 5MP Windows Phone Camera app isn't that far behind but is let down by poor handling of light variation across the scene, while Nokia Smart Cam again looks like its capture of data from the sensor was rushed and incomplete. Taking things into low light, not everyone likes Xenon-flash-list shots and not every subject/range is suitable for flash - here's a rather arty macro shot of a toy car in mainly artificial light, indoors, at about 30cm: In each case I was focussing on the front left wheel - let's crop in on the same shot as taken by Nokia Pro Camera, Nokia Smart Camera and the Windows Phone default Camera applications: The pattern is again the same, with truly horrible noise in the Smart Cam version, a decent attempt by Windows Phone Camera in terms of colour, exposure and noise, but the best photo again comes from Nokia Pro Camera, with pretty good control over noise, colour and detail. Finally, a typical low light, flash-lit shot - though I thought I'd give you all a break from shots of me (almost) drinking bottles of beer! This rack of DVDs looks like an excellent way to look at captured detail: Let's again crop in on the same shot as taken by Nokia Pro Camera, Nokia Smart Camera and the Windows Phone default Camera applications: At least we're seeing a similar story in all light conditions and subject scenarios. The default Windows Phone Camera application does a decent job of grabbing a 5MP scene, but tends to over-expose slightly (at least here on the Lumia 1020) and with poor dynamic range and IQ. Whereas Nokia Pro Camera takes the same output resolution and combines pixel data from the underlying higher resolution sensor to improve all these factors. (The Smart Cam photo here can be ignored, i.e. the central crop, since for obvious reasons it doesn't use the 1020's Xenon flash at all.) The comparisons above demonstrate very clearly the power of the PureView oversampling implemented (in software) in Nokia Pro Camera. Yes, there's a slight extra delay in launching the application and an increase in shot to shot times, but in my opinion the extra image quality is well worth it. And that's before you consider Pro Camera's other advantages, in offering 'zoom later' (albeit at the expense of some quality) and in providing half a dozen different photographic parameters to fiddle with at capture time, to get just the perfect shot you wanted. Which is not to say that the other two apps don't have their place. For example, in situations where you wanted to fire off shots very rapidly, perhaps at an event, the default Windows Phone Camera application might be more useful, while for extreme bursts of action such as at a kid's birthday party (think of the 'blowing out of the candles' moment) or when messing around with a pet or when capturing a sporting moment, Nokia Smart Cam would be the best option, in that the individual photos wouldn't be perfect but at least you'd have grabbed the moment to some extent.Test 1: Sunlight


Test 2: Decent light, no sun


Test 3: Low light, no flash


Test 4: Low light, Xenon flash available


Verdict
So, reversing my previous 'default camera app' decision, Nokia Pro Camera is now the one I default to, but I do keep the other two apps pinned to my Start screen.... just in case!
ΠΗΓΗ: Nokia Pro Cam? Smart Cam? Windows Phone Camera? Choices, choices...
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