Not exact matches
wide - angle
lenses give some really cool looking effects so shooting video with this one is going to produce some really cool
results.
A 25 mm
wide - angle
lens is incorporated into the standard housing and the camera is renowned for its excellent light - sensing ability,
resulting in clearer and sharper images.
Moment's
wide lens will give their phone a
wider field of vision with the capability to capture 2x more picture, but still
resulting in sharp, crisp photos without fisheye distortion.
At 20MP and 12MP, these
lenses combine monochrome and RGB sensors with a creative
Wide Aperture mode to make photography really enjoyable, often with pro-level
results.
One key difference is the second
lens has a
wider aperture (f / 1.7 vs f / 2.6), which should
result in better low - light performance.
With a dual -
lens setup, users get
wider aperture if both cameras are working together, which allow more light to pass through the
lenses to the sensor
resulting in greater depth of field in the pictures.
The main sensor is a 21 - megapixel working with 1.12 um pixels and a
wide aperture
lens of f / 1.8, making it apt for great low - light
results.
LG retained the dual - camera setup that worked so well on the G5, but increased the resolution
resulting in two 13 - megapixel sensors, one of which has a 125 - degree
wide angle
lens.
It's not the
widest - angle
lens out there — Nest offers 130 - degrees while Logi's Circle 2 goes all the way to 180 - degrees, albeit with some noticeable curvature at the edges of the frame as a
result — which demands some careful positioning to make sure everything in the room you want to monitor is in the frame.
Combined with a
wider 1.7 aperture
lens on the S7 cameras, that means you're collecting significantly more light than before, which should
result in sharper, less noisy low - light photos.