Pixel 4 VS iPhone 11- Camera Review & Test By North Borders

By North Borders
Aug 14, 2021
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Pixel 4 VS iPhone 11- Camera Review & Test

Hey, what's going on, I'd be able to shoot one I got hold of these two phones. I got a cool pixel four and an iPhone 11, so I figured I'd put these phones head-to-head, and we figure out which kind of camera is the best and what's really better for you, literally every single ad I ever save a phone nowadays is all about its camera about its megapixels and how many this and more frames per second and stuff like that is literally the reason why people buy phones nowadays, I did do a little of research on the price. I did find a Google Pixel for this Australian dollars, we're speaking starting at one thousand and fifty dollars, but I also saw a really dodgy eBay one for 800 bucks, but not the on eBay. But your website just has always just looked dodgy. I'm. Sorry, if I'm, honest eBay, just you just look dodgy as okay I, don't know: I'm, never buying, electronics from eBay okay and for a 64 gigabyte, iPhone 11, it's about 12 bucks, so I, there are 150 dollars worth a difference here.

Let's get out on the streets and, let's just say with these cameras so obviously, as you know, that Google Pixel doesn't have a wide angle weather as the iPhone 11 does its just for the sake of this comparison, the whole time we're going to be shooting on the 26 millimeter lens or the normal lens that both comes with the camera. I know the pixel has a telephoto lens, and this doesn't you get the telephoto lens in the pro series? Obviously, the telephone is going to be better on the pixel. So, for the sake of the comparison, we're just going to be using the one lens, the normal lens that comes with both cameras. Just looking at the photos right now, the pixel seems to be able to retain a lot more highlights than the iPhone, but the iPhone does look a lot more natural than the pixel. If you have a look here, I accidentally shot.

The first part of this shoot on the wide crop, I think was called where it shot everything sixteen by nine, but apart from other quality, is exactly the same. The quality was on both their highest settings on the phone. This is Google Pixel, camera and some reason it doesn't tell you the camera for the iPhone. But if you zoom in to me, it looks like the iPhone did a much better job, just straight out of the camera, without any editing quality wise. But it looks like if we look up here to the top.

The Google Pixel did a lot better at retaining highlights so in terms of sharpness and dynamic range and sharpness in dynamic range. The iPhone definitely takes the cake on this. One I'm just going to bring out a hundred percent of the shadows in both of them. So I've put the highlights down a hundred percent and then brought the shadows up yeah, it looks like the iPhone is still doing a lot better job of just coping with all the shadows and highlights alright. Next up, we've come to holier Lane, pretty iconic spot in Melbourne a lot of graffiti, like it's actually legal to do graffiti in this street, which is great for us, because we want to test the colors now on both cameras.

Keep in mind that the actual screens on the phones are going to be changing this a lot and another refresh rate on the Google Pixel can go up to. How do you even what is it the correct term? 99 Hertz, it's sort of like think about 60 frames per. Second, yes, is 90 frames per second, that's, basically, demo, okay, sim simple terms with Lemon, yes, I know the Google pixels screen rate shoots at 90 frames per second or 90 Hertz, and the iPhone undergoes up to 60 only goes up to 60 I feel so entitled saying that, but it's quite a big difference between both screens. There doesn't matter we'll chuck these into Lightroom and just have a look at them anyway. This is where you need a wide-angle lens.

That's the mill wall, alright, that's the Google and then, when you flick it to the wired. Ah bro, that's the one thing that pixel is missing a wide-angle lens, but we're not gonna talk about it. We're still going to use a normal lens. Doesn't matter, it's not a mistake. It's part of the design each own, each phone ? their own, should have put a wire in it.

I think it's pretty good I think it's pretty much even on both color and detail but like when you take a picture on the Google Pixel, and you look at the screen, comparing it to the iPhone. The Google screen is much better than the iPhone. In my opinion, like the colors are a lot more vibrant just on the screen. When you bring both of them into a computer, they look pretty much identical. We found out that the iPhone 11 it shoots a burst mode of ten frames, a second swipe, the little shutter button to the left, and they're just going to keep taking burst.

Photos like this I'll just drag it across to the left. Boom I just took 20 shots. Just then, then all I'll have to do is hit select, and then I can just go through every single one of those photos. I just shot, but we're having a bit of a dilemma. We're trying to do some research right now to see how many photos a second, the Google Pixel, can take because I held down I held down the shutter before, but it just went into a video mode.

Why is this so difficult? I, don't know you're so funny like we used to own Androids before, and it was fine but like I swear well like moving to iPhone, makes me dumber. Awesome. I can't figure this out. This shouldn't be this difficult yeah, let's not worry about the burst mode, so we just do a test that I know. Both phones definitely can do we'll just test the actual video quality and my left hand here.

I've got the pixel and I my right hand here: I've got the iPhone. It's feel super weird. As per usual. Literally any phone filming in the day will be fine, I'm interested to see what it's gonna look like at night. What do you think night? Mike hey what's going on night Mike here, thanks for that day, Mike yeah I actually have no idea.

What I'm looking at right now, because I can't see the screen. I! Guess you guys can be the judge of this one. This is pretty dark lighting. I know on my Sony right now, I'm at 8000, ISO I know. Most cameras are probably struggled right now, even filming cameras would probably struggle right now so be interesting to see what 4k does on either one of these phones alright.

So we just come to this spot here. I thought it'd be a good place to test out like the sharpness of the image. This is really where you want a wide-angle lens, and this is where the iPhones really going to excel, but, like I, said to make this comparison, fair shoot both phones on the normal shot and compare those photos. Yeah. The white balance on the Google as well I've noticed, is a lot more realistic than the iPhone.

Sometimes the iPhones a bit more orange than it should be or a bit colder than it should be, but nothing you can't fix up later, but if you're just sharing the photo immediately, the Google is actually gonna, give a bit more realistic shot. This one's really hard to tell as well as I, was saying with the white balance. The Google has a lot more of a natural look over the iPhone, but the iPhone is still compensating for the highlights here and that's why we have a bit more of a dull look. I think the iPhone is a tiny bit sharper, but it doesn't necessarily mean it's better quality. It just looks like it's done a bit of post-processing sharpness during the daytime.

It is so difficult to tell these cameras apart just on quality and detail. They look pretty much identical. Most of the ads I've been saying about. The Google Pixel have been about this night mode right night modes. Obviously a pretty new feature.

That's come out on both the phones on the pixel for and on the iPhone. By the way, I should probably mention I've got to keep the phone's extremely still. You can take them handheld, so I'm going to take slightly sip photos on each one. Just so I can get the most stable shot really decent difference at night. To be honest, Wow, the Google is actually doing a perfect job at night.

Photography holy like just on the phones. I can definitely say that Google is doing a perfect job, but I feel like this isn't quite dark enough, where I've actually parked my car parked under this tunnel. Here, it's so dark that I've actually had to push my camera to its absolute maximum in that 30 mm ISO, F, 2.8, 125th of the shutter and actually Leans here with a light, because it's that dark under here, in the background of where my car is there's actually a massive mural of graffiti, and it's got a bunch of different colors back there, I'm I highly doubt the phone's be able to pick this up. But let's see what this night mode can do. All right, I'll try the Google Pixel first Jesus Christ! That is a lot of grain holy.

Let me do the iPhone next, damn what the ride dude like I, can't straight like it's pretty much I can't even see any detail of the car. I know it's better than us. I literally can't see the back door of my car right now can only see, like the front part, the front grille okay, so this is where I saw the biggest difference with the cameras and I know both phones advertise their night modes or their night site on the Google heaps when you zoom in this is where you really start to see a difference in the Google over the iPhone, even with actual noise in the sky. Here, the Google has done a lot better job of just retaining all the details, and even in the shadows across the buildings here and the colors of what you actually see straight out of the camera. That Google has done a lot better job, even both the cars here just sitting here, there's slightly different images because I had to hold the cameras.

Quite skilled, I thought I shot these on Raw. By the way it says, JPEG, that's interesting, regardless is still doing a perfect job. The iPhones lost quite a bit of quality at night, whether as the Google is still keeping the colors and the detail and all the sharpness there I took this one here as well of this building, and this was really dark when I shot. This so I wanted to see how much of the detail it got out of the train tracks and the building itself. Well, that's actually, given both and I'm, just going to bring up the shadows yeah, yes, so even with the shadows up a hundred percent, the Google is still doing a really remarkable job.

It's not too much of a difference, not like a huge difference, but to me using cameras for quite a long time and my first ever phone being some weird Kmart branded bubble touch thing that had like a four megapixel camera on it. How far I've seen phones come is ridiculous, so, but this kind of quality to being either phone is pretty remarkable. Well, I feel like I was saying like in pitch darkness, like I, couldn't even see any details of the back end of my car, actually standing here in real life and I. Couldn't even see any color in the back wall here, the fact that both of these cameras could pick up anything is nothing short of a miracle and also amazing technology. This is where you really see quite a big difference between the iPhone and the pixel.

You can see that the pixels brought out a lot more color here, but it's also tried to noise, reduce the picture quite drastically as well, so I think in terms of sharpness. The iPhone has done a lot better job. The iPhones camera does a lot of post-processing sharpness, so it automatically does that for you once you take the shot and the Google seems to do the opposite of nine, so it seems to put more noise reduction in the image which is actually the better phone now. Obviously, this comes down to you as an actual user. Personally, the iPhone still wins in my books, because it works with all my devices, so I could never give up.

The iPhone I could also never give up airdrop, which isn't necessarily a camera thing, but it actually is very important for my work because obviously I'm a photographer, so I'm constantly every single day sharing files from my computer when I'm editing them to my phone and I tried sharing the files even for this shoot from the Google to my MacBook, and it was a nightmare, honestly. It took probably around an hour I had to upload everything to a Google Drive and then download it back into my computer, and then I had internet issues, and then I had all types of that just went wrong when it comes to using Apple devices, they obviously talk to each other, and then you can just airdrop stuff makes your life so much easier in terms of the cameras. I use Sony than a7r Mark 4. So that's what I mainly use for my work: I'm, not really too fast on what kind of camera I have on my phone as long as it can take a decent shot, which I think the Apple phone does a perfect job on, and I actually use the pro max. This one you get the telephoto lens as well and is honestly the best phone that I've ever used today.

I've been on Android for ages. I was until the start of this year that I moved over to Apple, where I got the computer got the iPad I got the phone and just made the whole jump over and honestly my workflow and my life has become so much easier being on Apple. That doesn't mean that I didn't like the Google I personally think the Google Pixel is an amazing phone and considering that iPhone is at what I phone 11 now, but they skip iPhone 9, so they've got made like 10, comparing to the pixel they've made. Four of these I think that's a pretty decent effort for making four phones. Obviously, there's a still a lot of research and development to go into these phones, but where they're at now is pretty awesome.

Otherwise, I had a lot of fun doing this photo shoot. I love, comparing phones, I love, comparing some tech, not a usual thing. I do on my channel, but I really enjoyed doing it. Furthermore, I love seeing the process and I love uncovering what both phones can do and pushing in to their limits, which I think we did a pretty good job on today. One more thing I should mention, which I've just I'm, pretty happy to announce: I set up a post office box, I put the address there in my description, I'm gonna start doing mail times.

You ever want to send me something send it to that address there. Yeah I, hope, I taught you something new today. I definitely learned a lot, a lot of new things about both phones. So if you did like this, video leave a like down below help me out by hitting subscribe. Both are all said and done have a one, so changed it to that.

No change it to that.


Source : North Borders

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