New camera features coming to the Google Pixel 5

Google’s Pixel 5 doesn’t bring any major changes to the camera hardware. The 2X telephoto camera from the Pixel 4 has been replaced with a new 16MP ultra wide camera with f/2.2 aperture and 1µm pixels. Meanwhile, the main camera remains unchanged from the Pixel 4. It’s a 12.2MP 1/2.55” sensor with f/1.7 aperture, Dual Pixel AF, and OIS.

Google launches the Pixel 5 and 4a 5G: both with S765G chipsets and similar designs

We don’t yet know how much the image quality can improved solely based on software advancements as we don’t yet have the device. Until then, let’s go over the camera features that are debuting with the Google Pixel 5 and Pixel 4a 5G (they have identical camera setups).

New camera features coming to the Google Pixel 5

Google touted HDR+ with exposure bracketing, which Google promises will deliver “clearer, sharper photos”. However, we know that Google has been “exposure bracketing” since the original Pixel. We can only expect incremental improvements on this front.

Here’s something significant: you can now shoot portrait photos with Night Sight. Currently, there aren’t many smartphones that can combine these two features, so this is an interesting aspect: the camera will have to not only compute the subject and create a synthesized bokeh effect, but it can also do it with limited available lighting.

New camera features coming to the Google Pixel 5

Portrait Light is a new feature that lets you brighten up a subject’s face where there may be too much shadow or if your subject is in front of a strongly lit sky. You can manually select where in the photo to add light on your subject’s face and Google Photos will be updated to let you do this with old photos as well.

New camera features coming to the Google Pixel 5

In the video camera, there are three new stabilization modes: Locked, Active, and Cinematic Pan. The latter is the one that Google focused on the most during the livestream. Google says it took notes from both Hollywood directors and cinematography YouTube videos to create Cinematic Pan. This mode will basically shoot at 60 fps and then slow down the video by 2X to create smoother, more dramatic videos.

We are eager to test the Pixel 5’s camera to see just how much software can leverage essentially the same main camera hardware that Google has been putting in phones since the Pixel 3a.

Source: Gsmarena

Comments

Comment to this post

Why Arenafile?
Direct link

Easy access to direct links at the highest speed

Over 10tra files

Includes: Official ROMs, Unofficial ROMs, Combinations, Custom recovery and ...

LIVE CHAT

Professional online support for customers who need guidance.

Purchase warranty

Guaranteed returns money if you have trouble downloading or download links

Why us?