Not exact matches
The
main camera has a dual
lens setup with
16MP and 20MP sensors, while the selfie camera is 13MP.
The vertically aligned dual rear - facing camera setup combines a
16MP lens with f / 2.0 aperture and secondary 5MP sensor for capturing advanced depth information, while the single front shooter might actually be the mid-range 6.3 - incher's
main selling point, producing super-high-res 24MP selfies enhanced by a number of AI techniques.
There is a
16MP Sony IMX298
lens in the
main camera, boasting the likes of OIS, EIS, and PDAF.
Both cameras ship with a
16MP lens, but the
main camera has more features than its counterpart.
The rear camera is also equipped with a dual
lens setup and has
16MP and 2MP sensors — obviously, these additional sensors are primarily added for an expanded feature set and aren't meant to be used for anything besides assisting the
main camera.
The cameras will stand at
16MP for the
main and 8MP for the secondary
lens and Android 6.0 Marshmallow will power the phone out of the box.
The rear camera setup hasn't changed much, but the
main lens has been bumped up from 12MP to
16MP.
The
main camera is a
16MP standard angle sensor with f / 1.6 aperture, laser detection autofocus, and OIS, while the second
lens with a 13MP wide angle sensor with f / 1.9 aperture and super-wide 135 ° field of view.
The phone comes with a
16MP snapper on both sides, yet the Google Pixel XL only manages a 12.3 MP snapper on the
main camera and an 8MP
lens for selfies.