This is the Huawei p30 / when I came out, we crowned this camera the best on any phone, but that was over six months ago now. Apple has a new suite of iPhones. So does that mean there's a new camera King? First up, let's talk about the star feature in the new iPhone 11 phones, the ultra wide-angle lens. It's super nifty, if you're in a tight spot, if you're trying to capture a Vista or if you're, just feeling creative the problem is Huawei has been putting ultra wide-angle lenses in his fly ship phones for about a year now, and it still has the features edge thanks to a periscope lens that lets to take five times optical ten times, hybrid and 50 times, digital zoom photos the iPhone 11 Pro phones. On the other hand, both have a telephoto lens that let it take two times: optical zoom and ten times digital. The regular iPhone 11 doesn't have that lens.
So there's no optical zoom and, as we'll see that's a win for the P30 Pro, but unfortunately for Huawei, that's about where their wins end. Here, quick note before you start comparing shots. I use the pro max the most expensive of all the new iPhones, but the only difference between this and a regular iPhone 11 is the telephoto lens, which means the only difference. You'll notice, when comparing photos between the two is when you're zooming in, in other words, most of the photos I took on the pro max, could be replicated identically on the iPhone 11 basic story of the two phones exists. The iPhone tries to recreate real life.
The Huawei tries to improve real life. It does is mostly by playing around with image, sharpness and cause saturation, and it tries to create more vivid pictures. Take a look at these food shots, for example, the granola shot by the P30 Pro looks great, but compared to the iPhone it looks like it's already been put through an Instagram filter in regular settings. The iPhone is fantastic at rendering true-to-life scene. The P30 Pro in general is also very good, however, sometimes that software can misfire here, for instance, the saturation is off and on the whole it looks over processing.
The P30 Pro can also be inconsistent when it comes to white balance. It often shoots photos with an unnatural cool in this is especially apparent where you compare it side-by-side with an iPhone. This carries over to the portrait mode, where the iPhone generally has warmer tones and richer colors, while waste processing also extends to skin smoothening, which makes the portraits look even less natural sense, the basics. Now, let's get to the new stuff, both phones have great ultra wide-angle cameras, but the iPhones is slightly better when it comes to exposure. The iPhones ultra-wide lens is more balanced in high contrast situations, the P30 Pro tends to struggle here, you'll see only overblown highlights were the skies meant to be, whereas the iPhone managed to capture a lot more information I really like this photo when I took it on the P30 Pro, but then I can head it to the iPhone in comparison, the wireless collars look a bit dull, and it's apparent that some over sharply as a plate to be fair, sometimes Huawei, software processing, actually works in its favor here, you'll see while a gets more detail in the mattes and on the carpet, and also a more accurate white balance.
I've cherry-picked these photos because they show you the greatest difference between the two phones, but on the whole in most settings both phones shot comparable ultra-wide images. Well, our weight is still way ahead, though, is zoom I still prefer the pro max over the p30 probe for photos taken at 2 times, magnification anything beyond that, though, and Huawei is the undeniable winner. These photos were taken at five times in. As you can see, the P30 Pro captures far more detail and is more other. Accurate quasi deserves the tip of the hat here.20:18 SP 20 pro was the first phone with the night moon, which is a software to brighten up images taken in low-light conditions, I'm conflicted here, Wally's default photos go through a lot of image processing and, as a result, standard photos taken in low-light conditions are already pretty good as a result, in some cases, night mode is overkill, adding in too much light and making a photo look artificial. This low-light shot captures an impressive amount of light, because night mode isn't even turned on.
However, you'll notice, a lot of artifacts in digital noise turning night mode on, will drastically improve this, but not eliminate it completely. These photos are much more evenly matched and both phones did a great job. However, look closely at the P30 Pro, and you'll see a niggling green tint. Meanwhile, the offers default low-light photos pale in comparison to the p30 pros, but its night mode photos are more true to life. The iPhone Elevens night mode is more realistic, but since we're talking about a feature, that's designed to autofit early add more light into a scene.
You could argue that Huawei does a more thorough job. It's a little subjective, but I give the nod to the iPhone 11 only because it's photos a more true to life. Despite that, many people have shown these photos to actually prefer the p30s. But again a lot of that can be chalked up to the filtering that Huawei does on his photos, but that filtering has a downside. It often not only reduces the accuracy of photos, but also the detail.
Photos taken on the P30 Pro do tend to pop, but often the more you look at them. The more you notice issues if we're talking about which phone takes photos. Your light more it's up to taste, if we're talking about which phone takes better photos, the iPhone 11 Pro max is the winner for the full written comparison check back to see note com.
Source : CNET