A new addition is the metal accent on the back that houses the rear camera, dual LED flash, and the Motorola logo, which is much more subtle and classy than the large, in - your - face, logo and
dual flash ring around the camera seen with the Moto X 2014.
Not exact matches
Motorola Nexus 6 features a 13 Megapixel rear camera with
Dual ring LED
flash, and a 2 megapixel front camera.
The Meizu 15 Lite specs include 12MP rear camera with 6 - LED
ring LED
flash, Sony IMX362 sensor, F / 1.9 APerture, 1.4 μm pixel size and
Dual PD focus support.
The Nexus 6 uses a unique
dual - tone
flash ring around the 13MP lens and has autofocus and OIS... it does not compete with the 16MP camera on the Galaxy S6 (see description below).
HTC Inspire 4G runs with the Android 2.2 Froyo flavoured by the latest HTC Sense UI on a 1 GHz Snapdragon processor, sporting a 4.3 ″ Super LCD display with 480 x 800 resolution, equipped with 8 Megapixels camera with
dual - LED
flash, 768 MB RAM, 4 GB internal storage, micro-SD card slot for 32 GB memory storage, 3G, Wi - Fi, HSPA + connectivity, DLNA, Mobile Hotspot capability, HTML 5 support, Dolby Mobile and SRS WOW HD sound, and an interesting feature called» Physical location awareness» — phone
rings louder when in a pocket or bag and will quiets when taken out.
The
dual - LED «
ring flash» does a decent job of lighting up dark scenes without creating horrible shadows, but the color tone is a little too cool, and there's still too much noise in the image.
The same
dual - LED
ring flash is present on the Nexus 6, and while competent is no substitute for a steady hand and an open shutter.
Continuing to take inspiration from the design elements of the Moto X (2014), the camera is surrounded by a
dual LED
ring - shaped
flash.
The cameras are very similar — the main shooter on the Nexus 6 is a 13MP sensor with auto -
flash, a
dual - tone LED
flash ring that encircles the lens and Optical Image Stabilization (OIS)... the Galaxy Alpha is 12MP, auto - focus, single LED
flash and no OIS.
The Nexus 6 sports a 13 - megapixel camera sensor on the rear along with
dual - LED
ring flash and a 2 - megapixel camera sensor is available on the front.
The handset also integrates a 13 MP primary camera with autofocus, optical image stabilization,
dual - LED (ring) flash, Dual recording, geo - tagging, touch focus, face detection, photo sphere, panorama, HDR, and 4K video recording support, and a 2 MP secondary shoo
dual - LED (
ring)
flash,
Dual recording, geo - tagging, touch focus, face detection, photo sphere, panorama, HDR, and 4K video recording support, and a 2 MP secondary shoo
Dual recording, geo - tagging, touch focus, face detection, photo sphere, panorama, HDR, and 4K video recording support, and a 2 MP secondary shooter.
Interestingly, the closest the back of the device gets to a camera bump is the small metal
ring around the
dual - tone LED
flash.
Nexus devices were never known for their excellence in picture taking, however, the Nexus 6 actually has a decent main camera this time around with a 13MP sensor, autofocus, a
dual - LED
flash ring that literary circles around the lens.
This time around, we have a 13 MP shooter and a
dual LED
flash that is found in a
ring around the optics.
The Nexus 6 has a QHD AMOLED display, a solid Snapdragon 805 processor, a great main camera with the
dual -
ring flash, stereo front - facing speakers, NFC for mobile payments and Android Pay, Nano - coated for water resistance, wireless charging (Qi enabled) and a large 3220mAh battery.
This goes up against the 13MP, autofocus,
dual -
ring flash (encircles the lens) and OIS on the Nexus 6.
On the back is also the 13 MP camera unit, with a chrome
ring around it that houses the
dual LED
flash.
We also have a
ring around the camera which gives us
dual -
flash, and it's actually not that bad looking in person.
The back of the device features a 13 - megapixel camera and
dual LED
flash that has been arranged within a
ring diffuser, but that last bit doesn't really make a difference in the
flash quality.
It has a better display, and better processor, more RAM in the main model, the same size camera, but a
dual - LED
flash ring, a decent size battery,
dual, front - facing stereo speakers, water resistant nano - coating, wireless charging, Turbo Charger, is available on all major U.S. networks, and Android 5.0 Lollipop, great software, and only $ 199 on a two - year contract.
The Nexus 6 has a
dual flash -
ring that encircles the lens, and the Nexus 6P uses a
dual - tone LED
flash that sits beside the lens.
We talked about the camera areas before, so just a quick recap — the Nexus has a 13MP camera with auto - focus, a
dual -
flash ring and OIS... and a 2MP FFC.
The Nexus 6 uses a unique
dual - tone
flash ring around a 13MP lens and comes with autofocus and OIS... it does not have the quick focus, a 16MP ISOCELL lens or f / 1.9 aperture on the S6 Edge +.
We asked Motorola about this and were told that customers complained about grain and blurriness on last year's model, so these hard limits were introduced to encourage customers to use the new
dual - tone
ring flash.
The rear camera
ring is altered to make more of an impression on fashionistas, while the
dual LED
flash contrivance is situated to the main photographic unit's right.
Pro 6s sports a 12 - megapixel IMX386 rear camera sensor from Sony, embraced with 4 - axis optical image stabilisation,
dual - tone 10 - LED
ring flash alongside phase - detection laser autofocus.
For starters, you now have a 5.2 inch Super AMOLED display w / 1080p resolution + 423ppi, powered by a 2.5 GHz quad - core Snapdragon 801 CPU, running Kit Kat (will be upgradeable to Android L) 2 GB of RAM, 16 GB or 32 GB of storage,
dual front - facing speakers, a rear f / 2.25 13MP camera capable of 4K video +
dual LED - powered
ring flash, a 2MP front - facing shooter, and a 2300 mAh battery.
I like the 6 - inch AMOLED display of the Nexus 6, the
flash ring, the larger battery, the
dual front - facing stereo speakers, the water resistance, the fact that the Turbo Charger is much quicker, the built - in wireless charging and most of all — knowing that I will receive the fastest Android updates.