Mainly because its stuck on a phone. A souless, flat, boring Facebook / Snap Chat / Tw@tter module.Very true. If the photographic gear gets better, how can that be a bad thing?
For me, you, photographers or the general public?It was stuck on a phone before. Why is the improvement of a phone camera a bad thing? And you don't have to post the picture to any of those places you mentioned. But if you choose to send it somewhere, direct from a phone, how is the inconvenience of a non connected camera better?
Name just one real problem with improving phone cameras?
For me, you, photographers or the general public?
I can post many reasons for me, on a personal level!
For me, you, photographers or the general public?
I can post many reasons for me, on a personal level!
Why do you hate mobile phones?
That's a very odd attitude to what is probably the most liberating technology of the modern age.I do, Simply because carrying a phone around is just allowing someone to have you on a longer leash.
(I do have one, probably less than half a dozen people have the number, all of which know that it's pretty much only for emergency contact, and while I carry it around, its mostly switched off until I want to make a call)
Like this you mean? Image quality from my phone is pretty poop, although I did resize them. My compact cant do this at this close, or is it just the phone software maybe?
I do, Simply because carrying a phone around is just allowing someone to have you on a longer leash
It's not the phone that is the problem there. I have a private phone that my family can call or SMS. No work or unwanted calls. If no one has contacted me, I can relax, as I know all is well. I can also relax when meeting people and someone gets the wrong time or place or is held up. The meeting can still go ahead if you have a mobile phone. Don't blame the hardware.probably comes from being "Issued" a mobile from work, maybe 15 years ago, in a job where I had 24h callout, and getting something like 40-50 calls a day.
Don't blame the hardware.
I think it is optical, certainly is on my Z2.
I should probably try one of the non-native apps to see if there is anything that lets you adjust aperture as well.
In fairness though, I'm all for improving the camera on my phone. There are times when it is the best tool for the photo I want to take.

It's not the phone that is the problem there. I have a private phone that my family can call or SMS. No work or unwanted calls. If no one has contacted me, I can relax, as I know all is well. I can also relax when meeting people and someone gets the wrong time or place or is held up. The meeting can still go ahead if you have a mobile phone. Don't blame the hardware.

It's generally about access, a smartphone is easily accessible.TBH I generally prefer not to take a picture at all with a phone camera unless I want a crappy quality image, because it inevitably leads to disappointment and frustration. I'd rather miss the shot than have an image that looks bad to me regardless of how much effort I put in.
It's generally about access, a smartphone is easily accessible.
I cannot lug around my DSLR all the time, it's simply not practical.
I personally feel it is only a matter of time before DSLR use falls, we can already see may users going over to mirrorless, as well as using the Fuji cameras.
Agreed. And add to this that people under the age of 40 seem to be addicted to them. My own gf will sit on the thing all night Facebooking, texting, Snapchatting (that probably says more about me but hey!). Then there's me. I have 3 of the things. One is mine the other two are for work. There's no escape. The last thing I would want when I'm out relaxing and taking photos, is for my camera to advise me that I'm needed urgently somewhere else to do something far less enjoyableprobably comes from being "Issued" a mobile from work, maybe 15 years ago, in a job where I had 24h callout, and getting something like 40-50 calls a day, at all hours of the day and night. Every call was either more work, another problem or some form of bad news. After 5 years of that, I really couldn't stand it anymore, and quit.
Sadly, my aversion to the phone as a medium of communication has been engrained as such a low level now that pretty much every time the phone rings, either at home or with my mobile, I'm just conditioned to think "oh crap, what the hells gone wrong now", and my spirits sink accordingly.
What is a real camera?Why are people worrying about things like this? It's pointless. What is a "real" camera? Are DSLRs a real camera? Surely they only are to our current generation because SLRs was the original cameras before DSLRs and before that when it first began was the Niépce - should we all make one of those as that's the real camera here?
What ever happened to it not being about the camera but being about the photographer? Evolution is going to happen. I have an iPhone 6 and it has a fully curved design along the sides but Samsung just brought out the S6 Edge which has a curved screen! - We could do this all day. None of this matters nor should it matter.
Sorry for being sarccy but I think the greater issue is the fact that people are losing perspective about what photography is about and instead replacing it by worrying about silly things.
What is a real camera?
Its very simple. A machine that is built and dedicated to taking still (or moving) images without compromise. Not a jack of all trades, communcation device / rubbish gaming console / mobile PC / torch / music player etc!
What is a real camera?
Its very simple. A machine that is built and dedicated to taking still (or moving) images without compromise. Not a jack of all trades, communcation device / rubbish gaming console / mobile PC / torch / music player etc!
Not really. I usually take a 6d with a 24-105 for general stuff and landscapes. A single battery is good for 300+ clicks, usually enough for me in one go.Or over encumbered by batteries and electronics...
A dedicated camera is just that - a camera.Many cameras that were built for that one purpose were compromised.. still are. So? I could argue that your teeny weeny small format DSLRs are compromised.
All this "real" camera nonsense is just that.... nonsense.
Not really. A dedicated camera is just that - a camera.
A camera phone is called a camera phone as its a phone with a camera.
A smart phone is called a smart phone as there are now too many things on it to list!
Not really. I usually take a 6d with a 24-105 for general stuff and landscapes. A single battery is good for 300+ clicks, usually enough for me in one go.
Lets not be silly!
I guess what constitues a "real camera" is different depending on the person, and I'm ok with that.You said it was compromised, and a proper camera is a camera for that sole purpose... with no compromises. I disagree. Many camera designed for that single purpose are horribly compromised. Your DSLR is compromised. It has a tiny sensor.
Choose another definition. What constitutes a real camera?
Any camera is a real camera.. stop being silly. The best camera is the one you have with you. How many times do we have to demonstrate that good photographers produce good work with whatever you place into their hands?
The sinlge battery in my camera is more than you usually carry?More batteries than I usually carry, but speaks to the various definition of "real".
The sinlge battery in my camera is more than you usually carry?
Does your phone not have a battery?
Yeah, but my "real" camera doesn't.