Post by account_disabled on Feb 1, 2024 3:54:08 GMT -5
The biggest trend in the best camera phones right now is AI. Every smartphone manufacturer uses machine learning to improve images through photo processing. And both Google and Samsung use artificial intelligence in the Pixel 8 and the upcoming Galaxy S24 series to allow users to do things like move subjects or fill the background. But what if the picture you took looked great the first time with really accurate colors and white balance? Spectricity is hoping to make a big splash in this space, and at CES 2024 it showed off its first multispectral camera on a phone designed to enable "true color" in smartphone photos. I know what you might be thinking.
Google has already Fax Lists made a big deal about Real Tone technology with the Pixel 7 series in 2023. But while impressive, it's only designed to reproduce skin tones more accurately. You get a show for everyone . The company claims that the S1's multispectral camera can assess colors more accurately than the naked eye. It can sense 16 different wavelengths simultaneously and replaces the AWB algorithms used with RGB sensors. We got our first demo of Spectricity last year , but now it's built its technology into a smartphone prototype. Spectricity camera phone (Image credit: Future) During the Spectricity camera comparison show with a Google Pixel 7 Pro , both captured images of a dark-skinned doll with pink paper in the background.
But Google's phone struggled to reproduce accurate colors, and when the LEDs switched from warm white to neutral white and cool white, objects took on different hues in captured images. Spectricity camera phone demo against Pixel 7 Pro with barbie and pink background (Image credit: Future) The Spectricity shocks, meanwhile, were much closer to what I've seen, and they stayed reasonably consistent throughout. I wish they had chosen the Pixel 8 Pro for the latest example, but the differences were still impressive. A Spectricity camera phone rendering showing the results from the Spectricity sensor versus the Pixel 7 Pro (Image credit: Future) In the second demonstration, using a camera phone prototype with a Spectricity sensor, it took a photo of an orange T-shirt and then searched for that color through an app.
Google has already Fax Lists made a big deal about Real Tone technology with the Pixel 7 series in 2023. But while impressive, it's only designed to reproduce skin tones more accurately. You get a show for everyone . The company claims that the S1's multispectral camera can assess colors more accurately than the naked eye. It can sense 16 different wavelengths simultaneously and replaces the AWB algorithms used with RGB sensors. We got our first demo of Spectricity last year , but now it's built its technology into a smartphone prototype. Spectricity camera phone (Image credit: Future) During the Spectricity camera comparison show with a Google Pixel 7 Pro , both captured images of a dark-skinned doll with pink paper in the background.
But Google's phone struggled to reproduce accurate colors, and when the LEDs switched from warm white to neutral white and cool white, objects took on different hues in captured images. Spectricity camera phone demo against Pixel 7 Pro with barbie and pink background (Image credit: Future) The Spectricity shocks, meanwhile, were much closer to what I've seen, and they stayed reasonably consistent throughout. I wish they had chosen the Pixel 8 Pro for the latest example, but the differences were still impressive. A Spectricity camera phone rendering showing the results from the Spectricity sensor versus the Pixel 7 Pro (Image credit: Future) In the second demonstration, using a camera phone prototype with a Spectricity sensor, it took a photo of an orange T-shirt and then searched for that color through an app.