Other Top Camera Cellphones
Nokia N82
This bar phone is sleek but just big and boxy enough to give it a camera-like feel when you hold it horizontally. A switch next to its Zeiss AF lens (equivalent to a 35mm focal length in 35mm photography) and flash (a traditional tube rather than an LED) flips open the lens cover and turns on the camera. Along with state-of-the-art five-megapixel resolution, the N82 offers most of the options you'd expect from a good compact, including macro and landscape focus modes; portrait, sports, night, and night portrait scene modes; and a customizable, "user-defined" mode. Its flash modes include fill and red-eye reduction; shot-timing options include a burst mode, a variable self-timer, and even time-lapse settings. White balance, contrast, and sharpness are adjustable, as is the camera's equivalent speed, which can be set to high (ISO 400), medium (ISO 200), or low (ISO 100). The N82 captures digitally stabilized VGA video, also on microSD cards, at 30fps in the MPEG-4 format. (You'll be glad to have the supplied 2GB microSD card.)
To help you with composition, the N82 can display a rule-of-thirds grid overlay on its 2.4-inch LCD. PictBridge support lets you send photos directly to a printer; built-in software makes it easy to upload photos and videos to the Web, which you can do by WiFi when you're within range. A Symbian S60 third-edition OS and Java platform mean you can add third-party mobile imaging applications, including software that uses the N82's built-in GPS capability to geotag your photos. About $500.
Sony Ericsson Cyber-shot K850
Modeled on Sony's Cyber-shot compacts, this eponymous bar phone has a camera-style switch for selecting photo, video, or playback mode. When you choose photo or video its lens opens up and buttons on the alphanumeric keypad turn into camera controls, identified by illuminated icons. Camera specs and features are similar to those on Sony's C902 (see page 1), with five megapixels of resolution and modes such as BestPic and Photofix helping you get a good shot both before and after you take it.
The K850 offers the sorts of white balance, color, and flash selections you'd expect from a regular snapshot camera, along with some you might not -- spot metering, adjustable ISO, panorama mode, and digital image stabilization. And no regular camera comes loaded with the K850's photo-blogging software, which makes it easy to upload photos (saved on Memory Stick Micro cards) to the Web. On the download side, its Java platform lets you add your favorite mobile imaging software programs. About $500, in green, blue, or black.
Samsung SGH-G800
The only model with an optical zoom in our stellar group, this slider phone has a 3X focal-length range that's roughly equivalent (in 35mm) to 35-105mm. It also incorporates a tube flash and 2.4-inch LCD. A sliding lens cover panel turns on the G800's photographic functions when opened, and gives it a very camera-like look. The new phone is camera-like inside as well, with face-detection autofocus, image stabilization, and a Wide Dynamic Range Optimization mode that opens up shadows while preserving highlight detail. The G800 offers scene, burst, macro, and panorama modes; adjustable white balance and ISO settings; and red-eye reduction. It also provides PictBridge support for sending photos directly to a printer. Images are saved to microSD memory cards; use the supplied full-SD adapter to download photos with your card reader. About $400.
LG KU990 Viewty
A stylish bar phone with a Schneider lens, this model sets itself apart with photography-oriented features such as manual focus (quaintly set with a ring around the lens), a top light-sensitivity of ISO 800 (which can be adjusted manually), and digital image stabilization, the latter two useful for low-light shooting without flash. The Viewty's flash is an old-fashioned tube, not an LED. And just like on a conventional camera, there's a three-position switch for changing from photo to playback to video. (Unlike most camera cellphones, the Viewty can shoot Web-quality videos at 120fps for slow-motion playback.)
A three-inch, touch-sensitive LCD screen makes an especially nice viewfinder and an intuitive interface for changing settings, which in addition to ISO include scene modes, macro focusing, and a variable self-timer that lets you put yourself in the picture. You can write directly on the screen with a stylus to add notes to your photos, and the Viewty's handwriting recognition software allows you to write out Web addresses so you don't have to punch tiny buttons. That way, you can get your pictures (saved to microSD or micro-SDHC cards) online even faster. About $450.

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