Huawei P20 Pro smartphone 'can see in the dark' [SEE SPECS]
Huawei's
latest smartphone can take photos in near-dark conditions without using its
flash or a tripod.
The P20 Pro
takes exposures lasting up to six seconds to get enough light, Owojela’s Blog
learnt.
It then uses
artificial intelligence to deliver sharp images and avoid the blurring and
smearing normally associated with employing this technique handheld.
The Chinese
company recently told the BBC it could soon become the world's bestselling
smartphone brand.
At present,
it is in third place behind Samsung and Apple, with US telecom networks'
refusal to sell its handsets proving an obstacle.
Like
Samsung's Galaxy S9-series phones - which recently went on sale - Huawei's
pitch to consumers for the P20 Pro is largely based on its new camera
capabilities.
But while
the South Korean company's S9+ made the leap to having two lenses on its rear,
the P20 Pro is distinguished by being the first mainstream phone to feature
three.
"Huawei
doesn't have the brand Samsung or Apple have, so it's almost had to go the
extra mile in terms of the product," said Ben Stanton, from the technology
consultancy Canalys.
"And
it's nice to see it taking the lead with some of the hardware it's producing.
"But
the thing with camera technology is that unless you are looking at side-by-side
comparisons [of photos] it can be very hard to tell which device is better.
"So,
Huawei has its work cut out to sell some of the new features."
The P20 Pro
will cost 899 euros including tax ($1,115; £788).
That is less
than both the Galaxy S9+, which costs 949 euros, and the iPhone X, which starts
at 1,149 euros.
The new
flagship's three rear cameras each offer different capabilities.
The main
sensor has an unusually high resolution of 40 megapixels.
But it uses
"light fusion" software to combine data from groups of four adjacent
same-coloured pixels to produce 10MP photos.
The benefit
is that images taken in low-light conditions should be less "noisy"
as a consequence.
"If you
had an area of a table and put 40 little buckets on top and it was raining, it
would take a longer time to get an inch-worth of rain in the bottom of each
than it would if you had 10 buckets four times the size," said marketing
manager Peter Gauden.
"And
that's essentially what we are doing. Using light fusion to combine four
smaller pixels together to make a much larger pixel, and therefore enhance our
capability of absorbing light into the sensor."
The facility
can be switched off, however, if the owner wants 40MP snaps.
The two
other cameras are:
·
A
20MP black-and-white sensor that can be used to take monochrome shots or to
provide depth information to blur the background of images taken by the main
sensor
An 8MP telephoto offering a hardware-stabilised 3x zoom lens,
which can produce 5x shots when used in conjunction with a software-based
digital zoom. This compares favourably to the 2x zoom of the Galaxy S9+ and
iPhone X
The P20 Pro
uses object-recognition technology to automatically adjust its settings to suit
each subject, and then catalogue the imagery, which it can do without having to
send data to the internet.
In addition,
the software makes composition suggestions when appropriate - such as when to
adjust the phone to keep it level with the horizon, or to loosen or tighten a
shot.
Like the
Galaxy S9, the P20 Pro has a super-slow mode in which 960 frames per second can
be filmed at 720p "high-definition" resolution.
But it also
offers its unique long-exposure trick.
To achieve
this, Huawei says, the device uses its ability to distinguish objects to find
the optimum frame for each item contained in a shot.
It then
takes information from other frames to improve the definition of each object,
while ensuring that edges do not become blurred as a consequence.
Finally, all
the digitally finessed items are merged together to create a single photo.
Image
caption The BBC took this image using the P20 Pro in near-dark conditions,
using the long-exposure feature
As a result,
a photo of the inside of a dim bar, for example, can end up looking brighter
and more detailed than it appeared to the human eye.
In one test
by the BBC involving a person stood against a dim background, the frame
selected of their face had them blinking despite the fact their eyes had been
open for most of the six-second exposure.
Huawei
narrowed the gap with Apple last year, despite coming under pressure from other
Chinese technology companies, including Oppo, Xiaomi and Vivo.
However,
efforts to crack the US market have been frustrated by AT&T and Verizon
pulling out of talks to sell its devices.
Reports
suggested local politicians had pressured the telecom operators to turn their
backs on the company because of concerns it had ties to the Chinese government.
Richard Yu,
chief executive of Huawei's consumer products division, told the BBC that the
Americans feared his company was "too competitive [and] too strong".
One
industry-watcher, who is impressed by the new phone, said that was not
necessarily good news for its rivals.
"Huawei
is going to throw everything that it's got at Europe now, because it needs to
make up the sales volume expectation that it had in the US," said Ben
Wood, from CCS Insight.
"Other
smartphone-makers should be seriously concerned that the threat it poses has
just been dialled up a whole order of magnitude as it's just released up
resources and money to resolve some of its brand issues."
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