A big-resolution-versus-big-sensor smackdown. vivo收購

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We’re not even out of tax season yet, but it’s already clear that the two biggest trends in smartphone imaging in 2023 are big sensors and big resolution. Manufacturers like
vivo收購vivo and Xiaomi are putting big 1-inch-type sensors in their phones, leaning into the light-gathering and creative benefits of a larger imager. In the other corner, Samsung is squeezing as many pixels as it possibly can onto a smaller sensor, betting on pixel binning and multi-frame processing to make up the shortfall in performance.

So which approach is right? If we were dealing with traditional cameras, it would be more clear: all things being equal, a bigger sensor wins every time. But all things are not equal when it comes to smartphone cameras. They capture multiple frames to boost dynamic range, combine pixels in response to lighting conditions, and automatically combine exposures in near darkness. The days of simply opening and closing a shutter are long gone.

I spent a week shooting with the 200-megapixel Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra and the 1-inch-type
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro
, and the results were surprising. Sure, a big sensor wins on certain things. Its RAW files are less noisy in low light than the S23 Ultra’s. There’s also shallower depth of field to play with outside of portrait mode. But when I let both cameras make their own decisions about exposure settings and processing — and introduced extremely challenging subjects like a moving toddler — the advantages of a bigger sensor shrank dramatically.

The sensor is just one part of the story

Then there’s something obvious that I was reminded of as I compared images: the sensor is just one part of the story. There’s the lens, the hardware processing the image data, and the software analyzing the scene in front of the camera. A sensor’s theoretical performance is one thing; how all those parts play together with real-world subjects is another.


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The camera sensors on the X90 Pro and S23 Ultra are notable, but they’re just one part of the imaging pipeline.

First, some housekeeping. The
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro and Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra both have a lot of rear cameras, but for the purposes of this article, we’re focusing on each phone’s main camera. That’s a 200-megapixel 1/1.3-inch-type sensor with an f/1.7 lens on the S23 Ultra and a 50.3-megapixel 1-inch-type sensor and an f/1.8 lens on the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro. Both have optical image stabilization, but only the
vivo收購vivo bears prominent Zeiss branding on the lens.

Say it with me: a 1-inch-type sensor doesn’t literally measure an inch. The way we talk about image sensor formats has something to do with old TV camera tubes. It’s weird. That said, this 1-inch sensor is still very big by smartphone camera standards. It offers about 1.8x more surface area to collect light than the 1/1.3-inch type sensor on the S23 Ultra.

The more photons, the better

To start, let’s look at a couple of places where the big sensor has the clear advantage. If two cameras are set up with the same exposure, capturing the same subject with the same framing, you’d expect a cleaner image from the bigger sensor. There’s just more surface area to soak up photons. Richard Butler at DPReview explains it way better, but basically, it’s just physics. The more photons, the better.

To help play catch-up, smaller sensors use a technique called pixel binning to group the data from individual pixels together so they act as one big pixel in low-light conditions. In bright light, they act as individual pixels — since there’s enough light to go around, smaller pixels work fine. It’s kind of a have-your-cake-and-eat-it scenario: you get better low-light performance and the flexibility of a higher-resolution sensor. It’s a sensor technology that’s been in use for years, and even Apple got on board with the iPhone 14 Pro, so you know it’s a trend that’s sticking around.

The pixels on the X90 Pro’s Sony IMX989 sensor are physically bigger, and bigger pixels collect more light. But even when you take pixel binning into account, the X90 Pro has the advantage over Samsung here, too. In low light, the S23 Ultra’s sensor is binning 16 tiny 0.6μm pixels to create much larger 2.4μm pixels. The
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro bins four 1.6μm pixels to make 3.2μm pixels. Both result in a 12-megapixel image (well, 12.5-megapixels in
vivo收購vivo’s case — Samsung downsizes to an even 12 megapixels).

So yes, the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro produces cleaner RAW image files in low light than the Samsung S23 Ultra. Here’s what that looks like at ISO 1600 — there’s clearly more noise in the S23 Ultra’s image.


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Full-size crops from the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro (left)
and Samsung S23 Ultra (right). Both taken at ISO 1600 and 1/20sec exposure. Each was processed from a single-frame RAW file in Adobe Camera Raw with noise reduction set to zero. You can access the full images via the links above.

But! Those are single-frame RAW files, and we haven’t brought computational photography into the mix yet. Putting both cameras in Night Mode evens out the difference quite a bit. If you look closely, there’s still some color noise clinging to areas of fine detail in the S23 Ultra’s image that aren’t visible in the X90 Pro’s. But downsized to the resolution you’d see on a computer or phone screen, they look about the same.


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vivo收購vivo X90 Pro (left)
and Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra (right) in Night Mode — click the links for full images. There’s some splotchy color noise visible in the stuffed animal’s fur that Samsung’s hasn’t been able to remove even with multi-frame processing.

Night mode is all well and good if your subject isn’t moving, but the real test for a smartphone camera is with a moving subject in crappy lighting — kind of a white whale for mobile imaging. That’s where the bigger sensor format could make a real difference.


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Welcome to a small sensor’s worst nightmare. A 1/120 second exposure on the S23 Ultra works fine here because the subject isn’t moving much — for now.

A faster shutter speed will freeze a moving subject so you get a sharp shot, but that requires a higher ISO so that your overall image is bright enough. Since the bigger sensor produces less noise in high ISO images, the hope is that it would be able to use faster shutter speeds in low light and come up with decent images of moving subjects. Computational photography makes it a little more complicated than that since shutter speed and ISO are kind of fluid concepts when you’re combining multiple frames, but the basic principle of “more light, better photo” broadly applies here.

Sadly, we have not found our white whale just yet. The
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro and S23 Ultra both very much like to stay at 1/120sec shutter speed when I’m taking pictures of my toddler in the standard camera mode. That’s fine if he’s not moving much, but it’s not fast enough to keep up with him when he’s running from room to room (his default speed).

The bigger sensor’s better baseline noise performance doesn’t seem to help much here, either. The images from the X90 Pro don’t look any more detailed than the S23 Ultra’s — and often, the S23’s images look better, even at a higher reported ISO.

In the scene below, both cameras reported an ISO of about 320 and a shutter speed of 1/120sec. The S23 Ultra image looks flat-out better.


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Full-size crops from the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro (left)
and Samsung S23 Ultra (right). Despite similar reported ISO settings, there’s much more detail in the S23’s image. See the full images via the links above.

More pixels — or, at least, a more aggressive application of computational photography — looks like it comes out slightly ahead here.

But wait, there’s lenses!

The other other thing about a bigger sensor is that there’s a bigger lens attached. It’s kind of a requirement. It’s also part of the whole better-in-low-light equation since a bigger lens will usually have a bigger aperture. That’s the case with the X90 Pro. On paper, the S23 Ultra seems to have the wider aperture at f/1.7. As far as phone cameras go, a bigger aperture is generally better — it lets in more light and gives a little more depth of field control. But the f/1.8 aperture on the X90 Pro is actually significantly bigger compared to the S23 Ultra’s because the overall lens is larger.


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This was taken with the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro from arm’s length away. The circular out-of-focus lights in the window to the right are an effect of the a bigger lens/sensor combo.

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The background on this shot from the S23 Ultra is a little sharper, and there’s more definition in the objects outside of the window.

If you factor in sensor format and compare apples to apples, the S23 Ultra’s f/1.7 aperture actually behaves about like an f/6.5 full-frame lens — at least as far as light-gathering and depth of field are concerned. The X90 Pro’s f/1.8 lens is equivalent to f/4.9 on full-frame, which lets in more total light and provides shallower depth of field. If you want to argue about the concept of equivalency, please report to the DPReview forums and tell ‘em I sent you.

That bigger aperture is good news for the X90 Pro, but the bad news is that despite the little blue Zeiss badge on the lens, it ain’t great. It’s sharp at the center, but there’s a clear drop-off in quality just outside of the center portion that looks to me like spherical aberration. There are halos around highlights and general smudginess around out-of-focus areas of the frame that looks like someone dabbed a little vaseline on the lens.


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From about 1.5 feet away, both cameras produce a blurry background behind this subject. But the
vivo收購vivo X90 Pro’s (left) depth of field is shallower than the S23 Ultra’s (right) with a greater degree of blur in the background. Lens aberrations are also visible in the form of bright halos around highlights on the leaves.

Spherical aberration is inevitable to some degree when you’re projecting an image through curved glass onto a flat plane, but I haven’t seen it like this in any smartphone camera I’ve tested over the past year and a half. Maybe that’s just one of the hazards of being an early adopter of a relatively new sensor format.

In any case, you do get more natural bokeh with the X90 Pro’s camera. It just comes with a side of mildly unpleasant lens aberrations. Putting a big-name brand on your camera doesn’t magically make it better, but
vivo收購vivo is hardly the first to try it anyway
.


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A bigger sensor provides better baseline performance and natural bokeh, but computational photography is still the real difference-maker in mobile imaging.

Who wore it better?

I’m happy that the 1-inch sensor format is coming to more smartphones. It’s great to be able to get a little more of the background out of focus without flipping into portrait mode. And the RAW data speaks the truth: a bigger sensor is still better for low light noise performance. The photography snob inside of me would prefer a camera with a bigger sensor producing cleaner images rather than a high-res sensor bludgeoning noise into submission with more pixels and processing.

At the end of every imaging pipeline, there’s just one thing that matters: the image

But at the end of every imaging pipeline, there’s just one thing that matters: the image. The X90 Pro is technically better in some ways, but as a total package, I’d pick the S23 Ultra every time. Samsung’s color tuning and HDR aren’t always my favorite, but in most real-world situations, it just performed better than the X90 Pro. Either the extra pixels or savvier computational techniques give Samsung an advantage, and I’ll gladly take that over better high ISO RAW files any day.

Samsung and
vivo收購vivo are both well aware that a camera is much more than its sensor, and the S23 Ultra seems to have all of those parts that make up an imaging system better synced than
vivo收購vivo. The X90 Pro might not have fulfilled every promise of a bigger sensor format, but I highly doubt it will be the last 1-inch sensor smartphone I test this year — far from it.

Photography by Allison Johnson / The Verge


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▲台灣智慧手機市場量縮價揚,蘋果仍以45%的市占銷售率奪冠。(圖/傑昇通信)

記者陳俐穎/綜合報導

台灣手機市場2023年12月銷售市占TOP 5出爐,手機銷售量市佔率排名,依舊由蘋果拿下銷售冠軍,但比起11月的48.8%下跌至45%,第二名的三星則是22.2%,第三至第五名的品牌依序為OPPO(10.7%)、
vivo收購vivo(6.7%)及Redmi(5.6%)。

本月台灣手機市場僅賣出38.2萬台,比起12月的44.6萬台下降14%,甚至也比2022年同期的39.9再短少4%,銷量未因聖誕節等年末促銷降價增加,反而被國外旅遊、年貨採辦、尾牙抽獎、等待年終入帳等因素影響買氣。

傑昇通信分析,買氣居高不下的蘋果iPhone,也難敵全球通膨加劇、消費者換機需求低迷、通路及線上平台大打價格戰及供應鏈問題,使得台灣12月手機市場呈現買氣低迷、量縮價揚;傑昇通信認為,農曆年前各通路平台促銷活動持續,依照過往在年前拿到年終補貼,或是幫長輩換機等等加成,仍有助於整體手機市場銷售量回升。

從品牌市占來看,傑昇通信坦言,即便蘋果依舊拿下絕大部份的銷售量,佔比達45%,而75.8%的銷售額也比11月的76.9%小幅下跌,銷售量跟銷售額雙雙跌逾兩成,也是前五大品牌中下降最多的;前三名單機排名同上月,還是台灣用戶喜愛的iPhone 15 Pro Max及iPhone 15 Pro的256GB版本,以及iPhone 15(128GB),第二名的單機iPhone 15 Pro(256GB)銷量更大減三成下跌最多。

然而整體手機市場衰退,市占率22.2%第二名的三星,較上月22.6%相比,銷售量小跌16%,銷售額也受到影響下滑24%;以A系列中低階機型橫掃台灣市場的三星,榜上前三名機型銷量一樣被波及,冠亞軍Galaxy A54(8GB/256GB)及A14(4GB/64GB)平均掉兩成左右,僅第三名的S23 Ultra(12GB/256GB)逆勢成長7%,傑昇通信推測與新機S24系列即將上市,通路祭出不少優惠,導致加速S23 Ultra庫存去化,進而催生銷量。

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