Category Archives: Tech News

LG V10 – European Version – First Impressions

  
Finally the LG V10 has arrived. My thanks go to Clove Technology for helping me out after UPS mysteriously lost the first V10. 

Clove Technology are selling the LG V10 currently for £375 plus VAT. If you’re quick you also get a pair of Bluetooth gloves worth £10.  Now that is cool. In fact if you spend £25 or more you get the Bluetooth gloves while stocks last!

  

The European LG V10 is different to the other versions. This model has all the UK bands but drops the internal storage from 64gb to 32gb. Apart from that it’s one super geeky cool piece of tech. 

Now I really enjoyed the G4, but the V10 takes it to another level. Whatever the G4 lacked, the V10 has in style. First impressions of the hardware are of a solid semi rugged phone. The secondary display, two front selfie cameras for different angles, gorilla glass 4, fingerprint sensor, metal frame, grippy back, infra red blaster, Sabre HiFi DAC and legendary camera with manual controls for photos and videos. 

Last night it was impressive to connect my Sennheiser headphones and only need the volume at 30 out of 100 due to the Sabre HiFi DAC and Amp.
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And oh the camera. It’s so much better than the iPhone 6S Plus. 

More soon. 

Apple iPhone 6S Plus vs LG V10 vs Asus Zenfone Zoom – Camera Shootout

Finally, three top class smartphones and time to compare some photos. 

The weather in the UK is no so good so this is a quick initial comparison. 

First up lets have a look at what the Apple iPhone 6S Plus can achieve. 

  
The colours are well balanced on the iPhone. You can crop a reasonable amount too. I must admit I don’t like the 4:3 aspect ratio anymore especially as when viewing on the iPhone screen it looks odd with black spaces either side of the photo. 

Next from the iPhone, some angry geese. These things attack. 

  
Now the next shots are from the Asus Zenfone Zoom. 

  
And using 2 x optical zoom you can get a lovely close up without being attacked by these angry creatures. 

  
So this is the shot of the gazebo from the Asus Zenfone Zoom. 

  
And using 3 x optical zoom on the Asus Zenfone Zoom. 

  
Now to the LG V10. The gazebo shot first. 

  
And a shot of the geese. All three phones were used in auto mode. To be honest due to the speed the geese were moving that was the only option available. 

  
I tried cropping these shots to see how the LG V10 and iPhone compared to the Zenfone Zoom optically zoomed shots. The V10 overall shoots great quality photos. The optical zoom on the Zenfone Zoom is good too. The iPhone shots are consistent. 

Now obviously there is a lot more to each phone and their respective cameras but I thought I would give you something to look at for the time being. 

LG V10 – Update

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As mentioned in many other posts, I was going to be using the LG V10 is a camera shootout with the iPhone 6S Plus and Asus Zenfone Zoom.

Well the LG V10 should have arrived days ago but it didn’t thanks to the folks at UPS and the poor security controls. This is what the tracking information says –

Merchandise is missing, UPS will notify the sender with additional details, all merchandise missing, empty carton was discarded. UPS will notify the sender with details of the damage.

However, all is not lost thanks to the folks at Clove Technology who have come to the rescue. So in a day or so I should be able to start firing up a LG V10, reviewing and comparing it as promised.

My main review for the Asus Zenfone Zoom will be finished and go live on Monday.

Asus Zenfone Zoom – Shooting directly into the sun

So from low light shots to aiming at the sun. Three camera shots highlighting the Asus Zenfone Zoom’s ability to shoot in to the sun. 

First shot is Auto. Second is HDR. Third is manual mode with EV at -1.0.  

  
  
Interestingly I aimed the sun at the phone screen and I could still see what I was snapping. Now manual mode with EV at -1.0. 

  
So which do you prefer? 

Panasonic announces the successor to the CM1 – Say hello to the CM10

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Panasonic has just taken the wraps off the successor to the Panasonic CM1 smartphone which featured a 1 inch sensor. The new device is called the Panasonic CM10.

So what’s new?

The Panasonic CM10 still features a 20-megapixel 1-inch sensor f/2.8 lens, the same 15mm bod, 4.7-inch 1080p display, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of storage, Snapdragon 801 processor, Android 5.0 Lollipop and goes on sale at the end of February for $800 approx.

Confused? You should be. The CM10 is exactly the same as the CM1 except it no longer has the phone application. Just LTE data sim cards for connectivity. It still has the old specification of the CM1 which did include the phone aspects. The CM1 comes with android kitkat out of the box with an update available to lollipop. Panasonic will only make 500 a month and sell the new CM10 for over $800.

My advice, head over to Amazon UK, buy the CM1 instead and have the option to use it as a phone only. You can still use it as a connected camera only if left in flight mode. It also is a lot cheaper at £399. You special link below to see the deal.

Panasonic DMC-CM1 Lumix Smart Camera Phone (20 MP) special low price on Amazon UK

Source – Panasonic

Asus Zenfone Zoom – Low Light Camera Shots – All Shooting Modes used

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Today is all about low light shots from the Asus Zenfone Zoom. So have a look at the camera shots below which also provides details on the exif data. All shots have a f/2.7. For the light trails living on rural Dartmoor means cars hardly ever appear hence the meagre light trails 😀

Shot 1 and 2 – ISO 50, f/2.7 , Shutter – 2 seconds 

  

  
Shot 3 – ISO 520, Shutter 1/4 second

  

Shot 4 – ISO 50, Shutter 2 seconds 

  

Shot 5 – ISO 50, 1 second shutter 

  

Shot 6 – Auto mode ISO 450, Shutter 1/8 second

  

Shot 7 – HDR mode – ISO 800, Shutter 1/7 second 

  

Shot 8 – Super Resolution mode – Image is 8320 x 4680 – ISO 468, Shutter 1/8 second

  

Shot 9 – Low Light mode – Resolution drops to 3mp – ISO 554, Shutter 1/12 second 

  

Shot 10 – Night mode – ISO 338 , Shutter 1/6 second 

  

And there we have a selection of low light shots from the Asus Zenfone Zoom. 

Asus Zenfone Zoom – Camera app, Settings and Tricks – review

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The Asus Zenfone Zoom might be a smartphone with a 3 times optical zoom but it also a decent smartphone in its own right. Unlike previous attempts by other companies like Samsung with the S4 Zoom and K Zoom, both of which I have owned and reviewed (see the index, reviews to read these) which had mid range processors and minimal storage, the Zenfone Zoom has a decent 64 bit processor, 4gb ram and as standard 64gb storage plus support for a micro SD card. It also packs tons of smartphone features, so lets crack on and go through them all (hopefully). In terms of my thoughts on the image quality, I will cover this off in my main review which will be live in about a week.

The Main Settings and Other Phone Options

Further down I have created a gallery of screen shots of a number of different settings options. Tap on one photo to open the gallery.

The first aspect of the phone I like is the double tap to turn on or off. Other useful aspects are the inclusion of NFC, One Handed Mode (double tap home key to turn on), Power Saving options, Easy Mode and also a kids mode. Are you brave enough to allow your kid to use the phone! Wi-Fi also includes support for Wi-Fi Direct. Bluetooth includes APT-X. Data usage is split between Mobile Data and WiFi as well as details of data usage per app. The display has options for adjusting the colour balance and also activating a blue filter for night time viewing. I have never used a blue filter at night until I got this phone, but it really helped reduce my eyestrain. ZenMotion is a range of motion gestures used as shortcuts for various actions. Double tapping the home key when one handed operation is active, reduces the size of the screen. You can move the screen around too. You can also write on the screen to launch different apps. What is neat is there are options to launch the front camera by scribbling a “S” and a “C” for the rear camera. A decent do not disturb option is available. The lock screen has the option for quick access apps and whether or not to allow the physical keys to turn the camera on. See the screen shots to show all the details. Theming is everywhere with loads of customisations galore for every aspect including resizing the icons on the fly. I see no need to install a third party launcher with the Asus Zenfone Zoom.

The Camera App Interface

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Ok, so this is a camera centric phone. So what are the options.

Front Selfie Settings

The front camera has lots of options from a timer that can be made to go off from 1 – 5 secs. To control the length, you just slide the shutter icon into the screen centre. The more you slide, the longer the delay becomes. Beautification is all the rage and the options include cheeks thinning, eyes enhancement, skin softening, blush effect, face/smile tracking. I had a lot of fun with the front selfie camera and was pleased with the shots even in lower light. I lost at least 10 years off my age with the beautification options 🙂

Rear Camera Settings

The rear camera has a feast of options. Or you can just use the auto mode. The operation of the camera is aided by a 2 stage physical shutter button and a physical button for launching video recording. The video button is next to the 2 stage shutter button. The volume keys then act as zoom controls. By default the settings are left to use the 3x optical zoom only and in my tests it bests to avoid using the digital zoom that goes all the way to 12 x zoom. It is better to crop into the 3 x optical zoom shots as the quality will be superior.
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When in Auto mode, if a better mode will produce a superior result, the mode icon appears bottom right. Tap on the icon to switch to this mode, or turn off. Typically this appears for HDR or Low Light mode. To give you an idea of the setting ranges in manual mode.

– White Balance – 2500K to 6500K
– EV – -2 to + 2 in intervals 0.3, 0.6 1.0 etc
– ISO 50 to 3200
– Shutter speed – 1/16000 (thats right, its super fast) to 32 seconds for long exposures
– Manual Focus – slider control
– Horizontal Level
– Histogram – on or off when taking photo

In Auto Mode you get the following options which alter if you are using another mode.

– White Balance – Auto, Cloudy, Daylight, Fluorescent, Incandescent
– ISO 50 – 3200
– Photo Optimisations – Auto, Off, Manual – Manual gives fine tuning for saturation, contrast, sharpness, noise reduction, backlight, detail enhancement
– Camera Resolution – 13MP 4:3, 10M 16:9, 8MP 4:3, 6MP 16:9, 5MP 4:3, 4MP 16:9
– Anti Shake enhancement – Auto or Off
– Digital Zoom – on or off
– Image Quality – Fine, Standard
– Timestamp – On or off
– Shooting Mode – Touch Shutter, Self Timer, Burst (off, normal, turbo)
– Focus & Exposure – Smart AF, Infinity
– Metering Mode – Centre, Average
– Touch Auto Exposure – on or off
– Face Detection – On or Off

For Video you get the same options with regards to white balance controls and EV adjustments as stills!

– Video Quality – Full HD, HD and TV (640 x480)
– Video Stabilisation – on or off
– Video Preference – Performance or Quality
– Video Touch Auto Exposure – on or off

Generic settings include smart brightness, guidelines, info screen, review duration, shutter animation, shutter sound on or off, launch by physical buttons options, location, correct photo orientation on or off, anti flickr 50 or 60Hz, Power Saving Mode, Set Volume keys for shutter or zoom, save to internal or SD card and a tutorial.

So what do the different photo modes do?

– Auto – automatically determines the cameras best settings based on the environment
– Manual – You decide
– HDR – Expands the dynamic range
– Beautification -makes you look beautiful
– Super Resolution – Combines multiples shots to create incredible detailed photos
– Low Light – boosts up light sensitivity for a clear and bright low light shot without using the flash. Images are 3mp 16:9.
– Night – Allows a slower shutter speed to capture more light in dark scenes
– Depth of Field – Captures photos of close-up subjects with a soft background
– Effect – applies a range of filters
– Selfie – use the rear camera for a high res shot
– GIF Animation – converts a series of images into a moving image or GIF
– Panorama – Horizontal or Vertical
– Miniature – Creates a photo of life size object and turns it into a small scale model
– Time Rewind – Records images before and after the shutter and allows you to select the best ones
– Smart Remove – removes unwanted moving objects from the background
– All Smiles – Combines each persons best expression from multiple shots into a single perfect group photo
– Slow Motion – records fast moving objects with very high frame rate and plays back in slow speed
– Time Lapse – Time lapse recording.

Each of the above modes often have a few extra options too.

Photo Editing Options

After taking a photo, you can easily check the information of the photo, from the time and date, weather at the time, width, height, file size, device, flash, focal length, white balance, exposure time, storage location, and geo location displayed on a map with the coordinates.

Post processing allows for all the beautification options as mentioned previously, applying over 17 filters, adding frames, cropping, straightening, rotating, mirroring or drawing, or fine tuning the photo (auto, exposure, vignette, grads, contrast, shadows, highlights, vibrancy, sharpness, curves, hue, saturation, BW filter, negative, edges, posterise, blur, feather or relief).

All in all, a comprehensive camera app with a wealth of options. As I mentioned, earlier, my main review will include a range of camera samples plus my opinion on its photo and video quality plus other aspects not revealed today.

Tomorrow I will look at low light shots and next week I will conclude with my main review.