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Camera The N95 is stocked with a 5 megapixel camera and a mess of settings that could make you feel quite like a professional. Picture quality is good. It uses an auto-focus Carl Zeiss lens. It’s also equipped with an LED flash, but alas, no optical zoom like the N93. The settings I was referring to include – Flash Settings aren’t any different from most camera phones with auto, off or redeye reduction settings. There’s also a self tier with 2, 10 and 20 second delays. Sequence mode gives you the option of selecting the interval between bursts. Then you also have exposure compensation and white balance settings. Color tones are also available for those artful images you may opt to take with sepia, black and white or negative options. And of course you have settings for adjusting the ISO, contrast and even the sharpness of the image and there’s a small preview window provided to make sure you get it right. The camera is a bit slow to start up. It takes at least 3-4 seconds, even when processing the images. But the quality is pleasantly decent. The zoom is a wee bit sluggish though. Close-ups pick up the colors really well and the detail is also not too shabby. There’s a slight water color effect if you look really closely. I’m not sure I liked the normal pictures taken in sunlight. They came off a wee bit grainy. But I guess they’re ok if you’re just a point-and-shoot user. So no worries. Overall the picture quality is great so go ahead, snap your heads off. Battery |
Tags: Nokia N95 , superphone , 5 megapixel
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