• kamen
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    29 months ago

    Multiple camera modules are what gives you a bit of versatility, but shoving in more and more modules is not what pushes technical progress. What annoys me is that this is part of what contributes to the ever increasing end user price. When was the last time you saw a new phone costing the same as the previous year’s model? Again, I’d be fine with a top-specced phone even if it only has one camera.

    Side question: how do dedicated cameras improve each year? Hint: it’s not by putting more camera modules in.

    • @Blue_Morpho
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      9 months ago

      shoving in more and more modules is not what pushes technical progress.

      How are better photos not pushing technical limits?

      Shoving more cores in cpus barely helps either because most algorithms are single threaded. There’s nothing else that can be done because of technical limitations. But no one is angry their phone has 8 cores instead of 1.

      I personally love the periscope camera in my Pixel. It gives me 5x optical range without having to carry a camera around. The wide angle lens is also great at Thanksgiving/ Christmas/ Birthday dinners when you want to get everyone in the photo. Pinch zoom out and everyone is in the photo.

    • @solrize
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      19 months ago

      Phones are cheaper now, it seems to me, other than the flagships which are an exercise in pushing the frontier of what people are willing to pay.

      • kamen
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        19 months ago

        Not really. A mid range phone is now easily $400-500 or more; that used to be the price range for flagships not that long ago.

        • @solrize
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          9 months ago

          I just bought a Moto G Stylus 5G 2023, $250 new, I’d consider it a midrange phone (top of Moto’s budget line). Entry level would be the G Play which is $100 new. $500 to me would be a premium phone and $1000 is a flagship. My previous phone was a Moto G4 from around 2017. It was around $170 new and was positioned a little bit above where the G Play is now.