N_LaRUE
New member
- Apr 3, 2013
- 28,641
- 0
- 0
The Lumix is mainly a camera that happens to run Android. Almost in the same vein as the Galaxy K Zoom.
The new Asus one remains to be seen...but Asus doesn't have a big tradition in cameras. Also the camera sports a 13mp shooter, which means even with the zoom, it may not produce images as good as the 1020. We'll have to wait and see on that one.
I agree about the Lumix. It's a niche device, not really a phone, kind of ugly too. The Asus device is rather nice looking. As for tradition in cameras, you could technically say that about any OEM aside from Sony and Samsung. This is all reactively new tech. Nokia's first run with cameras was with the N8 and let's face it, though great, that bulge was a tad annoying.
The difference with the Asus one is that it's optical zoom vs digital zoom. Whether that matters is always a question. Does 3X optical zoom match the 1020? I don't know, from the pics I've seen done on the 1020 they're practically DSLR quality when done right.
Currently the Nokia 808 and 1020 remain pretty much undisputed on the smartphone camera market. However it won't take long for Sony, Apple and Samsung to put out something that might end up beating it. Sony's Z3 cameras already match the 930/1520 (and beat them in low light). Apple's iCrap 6 produces stunning 8mp images that match when not beat the ones from the 930/1520 (Apple uses a Sony camera and has ex-Nokia pureview employees working for them though...so it's almost like cheating). And Samsung's S5 is also producing some really nice photos.
As an owner of a Z3 I can tell you I'm not complaining about the camera. It's not perfect but it's no dud either. It smokes my L920 completely, especially in low light and difficult lighting situations. I hear the Note 4 camera is pretty impressive too.
I like your reference to cheating.

The 808/1020 have yet to be beaten. But the rest of the PureView line has already been matched when not surpassed. Which was to be expected since heavy imaging development slowed drastically down upon the announcement of the Nokia/Microsoft deal. It's now up to Microsoft to decide whether imaging is an area worth the investment or not and to try and get ahead again.
Nokia has restarted the R&D of imaging solutions but for Microsoft it's no longer very useful as Nokia is developing the imaging solutions for Android, not WP.
When it comes to smartphones there will always be a fine line between of what dictates what people want. Majority of people want a quick shot camera that takes nice photos good enough for printing. That's it. It's simply to replace the compact camera. So 13MP in a slim phone will win out if the quality is there as I know it's not all about MP. So that's why things like the 1020 or it's successor isn't going to woo people. The majority want a nice looking smartphone first with all the goodies that come with that and a good camera second.
That's why a 1020 successor should not be the first phone that comes out for W10. We need a good high, mid and low end range. That's it. Niche devices can wait.
Last edited: