Time on my hands...you know the feeling...anyway, I decided finally to do something I've been vaguely thinking about for awhile and do a straight mano a mano between my recently-acquired Samsung S7 Edge, whose image quality has impressed me, and my Sony RX-100 (1st gen).
Taking advantage of the currently wonderfully clear skies over London, I took a couple of shots apiece from the top of Parliament Hill. Conditions were perfect, as you can see. All settings were on 'auto' - for both phone and camera (with 'fine' and the like always preselected). Not surprisingly, both produced crisp, clear images (this being from the Samsung):
View attachment 276795
(I've resized it down to 1500 x 2000 from its original 3024 x 4032 to enable the upload.)
So far so predictable.
But when I cropped in hard, I was surprised to find that although there was a difference between the two:
View attachment 276797
(sam)
View attachment 276798
(son)
...it wasn't anything like as great as I'd been expecting.
Checking the properties of the two images, the standout difference...
View attachment 276805
...was the dpi rating - 72 for the Samsung, 350 for the Sony. I was also surprised to see that the Samsung had chosen to use f1.7 - with so much light about, you'd have thought closing down to f5.6 or so, like the Sony, would have been a better option. Maybe phones err on the side of faster shutter speeds, given the challenges of holding them steady. But it must be quite a lens to perform like that at virtually full aperture.
I imagine the differences between the two would become more apparent in more testing conditions - low light being the obvious example - but like I say, as it stands I was surprised. And impressed. Hats off to Samsung!
And at the risk of overstating the bleedin' obvious, the S7 is actually quite an old phone now. I presume Samsung have continued to tweak, and you probably get even better results on more recent models.
The subject line is obviously deliberately OTT, and I imagine dedicated cameras will be around for awhile yet. But I for one am pleased to find that I can get such good results from my constant companion.