Night Mode testing of new iPhones makes the best Android device “look amateurish”

The iPhones 11, 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max They are already in the hands of various users around the world and soon they will also be in Tupiniquin lands. As we know, the focus of the new gadgets is on the camera, which has gained yet another (ultra-angular) lens in addition to even more features.

Among the range of possibilities with the new triple camera system, the Night mode Perhaps the most anticipated option for iPhones and us, we have already demonstrated how it works. The feature is really so good that the Michael Simon, gives PCWorld, said he makes the best Android device in this sense "looks amateur" in reference to Night sight Of google.

I'm simply amazed at what Apple was able to do with Night Mode on iPhone 11. When I tried the Night sight At Pixel 3 last October, I couldn't believe what Google could do with artificial intelligence and processing alone. Unambiguously, Apple's Night Mode makes the Night sight Looks amateur.

Night Mode on iPhone

Simon also attributed the best UI to the iPhone, saying that Apple had accomplished quite a bit by making the camera not only more powerful, but also more intuitive, especially with Night Mode photo processing, which is automatically activated when the camera is turned on. detects low light.

IPhone puts the countdown at the bottom of the screen so it doesn't interfere with what you're trying to record. The camera application tells you exactly how long (Night Mode) processing will usually take one or two seconds, depending on the available light so you know in advance how long you need to keep your hand steady. This is a mystery to the other phones.

Compared to some of the best flagships such as Samsung's Galaxy S10 + and Google's Pixel 3 XL, iPhone 11 Night Mode (we're not even talking about Pro devices) gives a beating to competitors:

Night Mode and Night Sight ComparisonFrom left to right: iPhone 11, Pixel 3 XL and Galaxy S10 +

More Night Mode Tests

Videos

As we said, we have analyzed not only the Night Mode, but the triple camera system of the 11 Pro and 11 Pro Max iPhones, and you can check out the result of the analysis of our dear editor-in-chief Rafael Fischmann below:

This feature has not gone unnoticed by top Apple photographers and enthusiasts alike, including Rene Ritchie himself. iMore, which ripped silk for Night Mode, but also pointed out some points where Apple's feature lags behind competitors.

Night Mode on iPhone 11 doesn't do everything. You cannot force it manually. You can't use it with the ultra wide angle with no pixel focus. But what you can do, you can do well.

The channel creator iPhonedoFaruk also published a video (tip from Pietro Souza) demonstrating and, of course, complimenting Night Mode on the new iPhones even though, at the beginning of the video, he makes a veiled new ultra-angular lens, which he says is “weak” (we talk a little bit about it here).

Images

More than videos, the best way to compare images captured with Night Mode is to actually lay them side by side with other photos without this feature. So check out the photos from the published by Ben Lovejoy, 9to5Mac:

Opinion is not aesthetic and varies from person to person; Of course, certain users go beyond and religiously defend a certain brand (be it Apple, Samsung, Google, etc.); Anyway, Night Mode represents a breakthrough in the camera of iPhones and that is the fact.

Of course, speculation will revolve around Apple's next generation of smartphones, which may include a new 3D sensor that will certainly further enhance the quality of the handset images (or perhaps contribute to the deployment of yet another unique feature. future iPhones).

Moreover, in the coming weeks we will see the arrival of Pixel 4 in the market that certainly promises to further stir these comparisons, and perhaps even resume the preference of analysts. We will follow!

via the loop