For me it’s the notification light you used to find on older phones, was particularly good to know if your phone was charged without picking it up

    • @Blue_Morpho
      link
      11 year ago

      it seems your ignorant ass thinks that all those came modules are different lenses

      A camera is made up of a lens and sensor. In phones, there is a 1:1 mapping between lens and sensor. For example my pixel 7 pro has 3 lenses on the back each with their own sensor. If you know of a phone that has multiple lens feeding one sensor or vice versa, please link.

      Secondly cameras on a phone is the result of social media and selfie craze

      That premise isn’t supported by demographics. Over 80% of the US population is either over 50 or under 10, neither of which represents significant social media selfie craze.

      Furthermore, point and shoot cameras used to be multi billion dollar market before smartphones. That market is now dead https://shotkit.com/news/smartphones-have-wiped-out-97-of-the-compact-camera-market/
      Regular people were buying cameras. They replaced their camera with a phone. Regular people, before there was social media, took lots of photos.

      I don’t care if they are as good as professional cameras

      I didn’t say anyone cared about professional results either. I specifically mentioned in an earlier post that phones replaced the compact digital camera market. Regular people bought new compact digital cameras every few years to take better photos despite no social media.

      And if you really that much into taking good pictures and photography than you’re not seen average user are you?

      I already linked a survey that only 10% of technical Android users do not care about camera quality when deciding on a new phone. Regular users want a good camera. Regular users used to buy new compact digital cameras to take photos before social media.