Category Archives: Editorial

1 Week into the RMO – Staying Active is Important

Malaysia is still under Restricted Movement Order (RMO), or Movement Control Order (MCO), or in other words, partial lockdown. We are just one step away from a national curfew or martial law. If you have been living under a rock and have not known what is happening outside your windows, we are under RMO/MCO/lockdown because of the COVID-19 situation which is worsening as the days go by. To be specific, we are under this condition to combat the worsening COVID-19 situation.

Why this is the best way to go? There are plenty of graphs and what not to be shown, but we are not going to do that here. All you need to know is it is very important that we practice social distancing and stay at home as much as possible to limit infection rate and risks.

Staying at home can be a drag for plenty though. We can understand that, especially for those social butterflies out there. We feel your pain, but at the same time I personally like staying indoors anyway. Still, it does get boring; you run out of games to play, run out of books to read, generally running out of things to do eventually.

It is quite a simple fix though. You can order books online now and buy games digitally. You do not need to step out of the house for all these for a while now. You can even get a movie on your couch with Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, what not. Still, these things cost you money. There is something else you can do, for free – exercise.

The Right Tools Are Essential

We are saying that exercising can be fun, yes. Beyond that though, in the days where you can barely step out of your home, it is always important for you to keep yourselves active and healthy. By sitting around and working all the time while watching YouTube recipe videos, you tend to get lazy, and unhealthy.

We are pretty sure you have been eyeing those smartwatches and fitness trackers for some time now. It is the in thing these days anyway. At this time, you must be thinking; “maybe not now, maybe wait until this whole ‘stay at home’ thing blow over”. We are telling you that is the wrong mindset, because at this point the government is talking about extending the RMO/MOC/lockdown for another two weeks. Even the Olympics committee is looking to postpone the Tokyo Summer Olympics 2020 just to combat the pandemic that is the COVID-19.

Source: Garmin

Now is a good time as any to get a smartwatch or a fitness tracker. If you are planning to get one already, Garmin makes some great stuff (we can testify), and they are having some great promotions for their smart trackers now. For example, the Garmin Forerunner 245 and 245 music (one of my personal favourites, review coming soon) is on sale for MYR 1,299 and MYR 1,499 (originally MYR 1,450, and MYR 1,699) respectively. It will last you up to 7 days in normal smartwatch mode. It has GPS and built in music capabilities too. Be warned though, battery will drain within 6 hours if you turn both on.

Source: Garmin

The Garmin Forerunner not your cup of tea? Need something more basic? The Garmin Instinct would fit great with its ruggedness too. It is built to the U.S. military standards 810G to ensure that it still works in the most hostile environments. This would be perfect for you Spartan Challenge and Viper Challenge junkies. It has a battery life of up to 14 hours. It has GPS too of course, and that would last you u to 14 hours, 35 hours in UltraTac mode. You can get it in its plain body form, or tactical form (ATACS camo) for MYR 1,299 and MYR 1,450 (originally MYR 1,450 and MYR 1,599) respectively.

Source: Garmin

Nope? Need something more smartwatch like? Need touch screen? Something more elegant you can wear every day. There is the Garmin Venu, a pretty looking thing that has all the great Garmin features with a pretty AMOLED touch sensitive display. This smartwatch can last up to 5 days too, much better than almost anything with proper smartwatch functionalities in the market. Of course, the Garmin Venu also has GPS built into its svelte body and music storing capabilities. With both on, you get 6 hours of battery life. But you do not need more than that in your exercises. It is available now in plenty of colour combination options for MYR 1,599 (originally MYR 1,799). My personal favourite is the Blue Granite/Silver combination.

The Garmin smart trackers are on this discount until the 31st of March 2020, that is when the lockdown order ends too. All the promotions are also coupled by Free Shipping by Garmin with FREESHIPPING code from their local distributor. Well, because, you know, you cannot go out; and retails are not open. Visit their online store now.

You have the Samsung Galaxy Watch or the Samsung Galaxy Watch Active 2 that is now MYR 1,299 each. The Samsung Galaxy Watch, in my opinion, remains the best smartwatch that you can pair to your Android at this point. Of course they do not offer crazy one-week battery life. You get at most 3 days or so before needing a charge. Still, you get GPS, music storage, heart rate tracking, and activity monitor with them too. Plus, Samsung is participating in Lazada’s birthday promo on the 27th March 2020

Source: Apple

Or if you are an Apple user, you can always go back to the Apple Watch Series 5 currently. While we are not huge Apple fans, we have to admit that the Apple Watch has come a long way as a smartwatch option. The Apple Series 5 is a great smartwatch on its own with plenty of unique features like ECG monitoring, fall detection, and what not. Hey, it looks great too, in my opinion.

There are of course, plenty of options out there for you. There are more stuff in Garmin’s product range that might fit your preference better, or there are even great options from other people. There are also cheaper, more basic stuff out there. You just have to go into the interwebs and look.

Back to Basics

Back to keeping yourselves at home. There are plenty of exercise videos you can actually watch from YouTube to keep yourself active. A search of home exercises come up with a plethora of videos that might fit your needs at home, so we are not going to feature any video here.

If you are not into the exercising videos or instructional though, that is okay too. There are other ways to keep yourself active. Yes, we try to do them too.

For one, you can just make sure you walk around the house. While you might have set up your workstation at home to be as convenient as possible for you work wise, you should separate all the living stuff and work stuff. This ensures that you do not stay in one place for too long. Somehow this forces you to get up and walk around the house to get water, or tea, or even food. Maybe you should even put your smartphone further away from you so that you will walk up to it to answer if there are any calls. I know I am doing that. Only issue is, if you accidentally put it on silent or leave your headphones on. Of course, check in from time to time.

Who says you need weights to keep yourself active at home? Keeping yourself active at home can be just as simple as keeping yourself active in the office. You have water bottles you can use as weight to do your weight-lifts and what not. While it may not be as intensive or taxing on your body than those crazy home workouts you see on YouTube videos, it is still something you can do to keep your body moving.

Of course, since you actually have plenty of time at home now, since you do not have to travel to work on a daily basis (you free up at least an hour of your day, you have not considered the time you take to go out with your friends, for meals). You have at least that one hour to get proper exercises done. You can do your basic push-ups, sit-ups, crunches, and whatever not. Of course, there are some more effective exercises you can find from YouTube and what not.

Still do not want to do it in front of the TV? Garmin has something called a Squad Virtual Challenge. It is a community-based fitness and exercise program that is now online. Obviously you have to be a Garmin owner to take advantage, hence the promotions. But you get new regimes every two weeks from the Squad Virtual Challenge (for now), so you can do something different every two weeks or so to keep your workout sessions more varied.

There are also plenty of other workout regime subscriptions or community workout plans out there. Some are free, some are not. Some of them may work for you, some of them may not. It really depends on what you want out of your workout sessions too. So you should really look into it.

Going to the gym, or even going for an outdoor jog is not really an option at this time. You really have to find the time on your own to keep yourselves active. We also understand that it can get quite difficult since you are just staying at home most of the time. It is important to keep yourselves active though. An active lifestyle is a more productive lifestyle, trust me.

techENT Download || Apple Cancels the iPhone SE2, OPPO Getting Sued, Find X2 and more

The Week of March 9th was an eventful one with two big launches, two court cases and multiple events getting cancelled due to the COVID-19 outbreak. OPPO announced the official availability of the Find X2 series in Malaysia with prices starting at MYR3,999. Xiaomi announces the new Redmi Note 9 Pro Series. Apple seems to have cancelled the new iPhone SE 2 amidst the COVID-19 situation while other companies start working from home.

We had Adam Lobo (@adamlobotv) on our podcast last week! Do head to the link to give a listen. We are also excited to have Jason Goh of SmashPop (@Smashpop) over in our podcast in the coming week. Check out their YouTube link!

https://open.spotify.com/episode/1uoJs9fVhfRn7cAdTl1VY6?si=1JRykNzUSMahEk3rmsuPfw

www.youtube.com/adamlobotv

www.youtube.com/smashpop

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Tech & Tonic Episode 5 Feat. Smashpop – OPPO’s New Flagship Impresses and Revisiting Smartphone vs Camera

In this week’s Tech & Tonic Podcast, we have Jason Goh of @Smashpop! Jason Goh is one of the more prolific figures in the digital content creation industry. He has a vast experience in the field and is one of the guys behind Tricycle TV, a social media channel that focuses on reviewing tech in Bahasa Melayu. He is also very active in Social Media with @Smashpop across all platforms including YouTube, Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. He is also on TikTok, but not very active; as he says. All good things must be shared, and that is why Jason also conducts workshops for you to better your Social Media presence and skills.

Last week saw one of the most anticipated smartphones (to us anyway) launch globally and in Malaysia. It is the OPPO Find X2 series, a flagship that is two years in waiting now. We had our hands on the OPPO Find X2 as well as Jason with the OPPO Find X2 Pro. We spoke at length about the device; what we like, what we do not like, and what we found interesting. Still, at MYR 3,999 (starting from), it is not what you would call ‘affordable’. Are the features enough to justify its price tag though?

On the subject of smartphones, we revisit the topic of smartphone cameras vs proper cameras. Fitting topic, since we have another very experienced content creator that focuses plenty of visuals. The OPPO Find X2 series also triggers the topic with its claim on topping the DX0Mark charts (OPPO Find X2 Pro). Of course, we would want to know what his opinion is on this subject. We did an editorial on this subject too.

Catching Up with Snap Inc.: The Big Comeback & Bitmoji TV

A little while back, the team at techENT had the privilege of catching up with Nana Murugesan, Managing Director for International Markets at Snap Inc. and Ba Blackstock, CEO of Bitmoji at Snap Inc. The interview was done shortly after the launch of Bitmoji TV. Snap had acquired Bitstrips, the company that owned Bitmoji, back in 2016 for a healthy USD$64.2 million.

During this interview, techENT posed questions to Nana and Ba regarding Snapchat and also Bitmoji TV. In particular, how the new integration will benefit and change the scene for Snapchat. Here’s the full interview text.

techENT: Looking back a little bit, Snapchat had a boom in the social media space with its unique offering of creating “disappearing” content. When Facebook introduced its own with Stories across its apps, the drop in users on Snapchat was heavily reported. What has changed with Snapchat and how have users responded to this?

Nana Murugesan: First of all, Snapchat isn’t social media. From the very beginning we designed Snapchat to enhance your experience outside of the app and reflect the way that people have interacted with their best friends, long before the creation of the smartphone. To a certain extent, this was a reaction to what we were seeing on social media and the issues these platforms face. So just like in real life, your conversations with your friends disappear and your stories unfold in chronological order.

Bitmoji of Nana Murugesan

While other platforms may now have these features, their underlying philosophy is very different. On Snapchat, people are free to be themselves, with their real friends. There have never been likes or comments, so it feels like less of a competition. That way, Snapchatters aren’t pressured to be pretty, perfect or popular; and we don’t stockpile data so our community doesn’t have to worry that everything they send will be kept for eternity. Snapchat also opens directly to the camera and over 3.5 billion Snaps are created each day.

We’re focused on creating engaging experiences through which our community can stay close with their real friends and when not chatting or Snapping with those they love. For example, we introduced Snap Games last year and recently launched Bitmoji TV.

techENT: What is the user base for Snapchat now?

Nana Murugesan: We are really happy to see a continuous growth in our Daily Active Users. During our last earnings call (Q4, Feb 2020), we shared that there are 218 million people on average, globally using Snapchat every day. This is a 17% year over year growth (31M).

Bitmoji of Nana Murugesan

techENT: What are some of the new features that users are crazy about on Snapchat?

Nana Murugesan: Apart from Bitmoji TV, we’ve been finding all sorts of ways to let Snapchatters have fun with their Bitmoji. So far, Bitmoji Stories have been a hit amongst users, with an average of 18 million viewers per comic strip. Created as a personalised comic that features the Bitmoji of Snapchatters and their friends, it also eventually became the inspiration behind Bitmoji TV.

Bitmoji of Nana Murugesan

We’ve also since introduced several games that feature your Bitmoji such as Bitmoji Tennis, a battle-royale style game called Tiny Royale, and recently we released Ready Chef Go, a co-op cooking game played with your friends and Color Galaxy – where you can conquer the galaxy together. 

Adding to more shareable moments, Snapchat also launched Cameos in December which lets you put your face on animated memes and short GIFs that also feature you and your friends.

Introducing Cameos

While Lenses aren’t a new feature, both Snapchat’s internal team and Snapchat’s Official Lens Creators are constantly creating new, innovative and fun lenses that are loved by many Snapchatters. In fact, every day over 70% of Snapchatters play with AR Lenses, and over 600,000 Lenses have been created by our community through Lens Studio.

techENT: Snap Inc, Snapchat’s parent company, acquired Bitstrips back in 2017. What was the strategy behind the acquisition?

Ba Blackstock: In late 2014 Bitstrips launched Bitmoji, which surged in popularity in 2015, becoming a cultural phenomenon. It resonated with people because it gave them a way to represent themselves in their online interactions that felt more personal, authentic and fun.

Bitmoji of Ba Blackstock

The massive popularity of Bitmoji led to a conversation with Snap, in which we realised that our companies shared the same passion for creativity, self-expression and visual communication, so it seemed like a natural fit to join forces.

Through the acquisition we were able to use Bitmoji to bring a new kind of visual identity and expression into Snapchat, and to grow Bitmoji to become bigger than ever before. Since joining Snap Bitmoji has been the iOS app in over 100 countries.

techENT: Have any of Bitstrip’s Bitmoji features been introduced in Snapchat? How popular/well-received is Bitmoji since their introduction?

Ba Blackstock: Bitmoji has transformed the experience within Snapchat by becoming Snapchatters’ visual identity in the app, as well as giving them lots of new ways to communicate and express themselves – from stickers in chat, to geofilters on Snaps, to 3D Bitmojis in AR lenses, to Bitmoji Stories in Discover. 

Bitmoji of Ba Blackstock

Bitmoji has proven to be incredibly popular and over 70% of Snapchatters now have a Bitmoji.

techENT: Tell us what is Bitmoji TV.

Ba Blackstock: Bitmoji TV is a fully animated show starring your own Bitmoji, that you can watch now on Snapchat – with new episodes coming out every Saturday morning.  Each episode is between 3-5 minutes long and makes your Bitmoji the main character, alongside celebrity guest stars like Andy Richter, Jon Lovitz and Riki Lindhome, to name a few.

Bitmoji of Ba Blackstock

The premise of Bitmoji TV is that you are the biggest new star on TV – you’ve been cast in every show, every movie, every commercial, and each episode is a fast-paced combo of very different scenes. One minute you’ll see yourself in an action movie, the next minute you’re in a soap opera, then you’re in a sitcom. We’ve created our own animation style that is an audiovisual feast for the senses, with you at the center.

techENT: What sets Bitmoji TV apart from other platforms such as IGTV and YouTube? / Why introduce another platform in a space that seems so crowded?

Ba Blackstock: Bitmoji TV represents the beginning of an entirely new category of entertainment – a personalized experience that is unique for every single viewer. It’s also one of the first fully animated shows that’s designed to be viewed on your phone, in the vertical format. We had to build our own experimental animation and rendering technology to make it possible for this show to exist. But more than that, it’s a new experience that you can share with your friends that doesn’t exist anywhere else.

Bitmoji of Ba Blackstock

Bitmoji TV represents the beginning of an entirely new category of entertainment – a personalized experience that is unique for every single viewer. It’s also one of the first fully animated shows that’s designed to be viewed on your phone, in the vertical format. We had to build our own experimental animation and rendering technology to make it possible for this show to exist. But more than that, it’s a new experience that you can share with your friends that doesn’t exist anywhere else.

techENT: What type of content can we expect from Bitmoji TV?

Ba Blackstock: Bitmoji TV makes you the star of just about every type of TV show imaginable – talent shows, cop shows, sitcoms, soap operas, action movies and more. Every episode is different and is a fast-paced collection of various shows, as seen through the lens of Bitmoji’s unique sense of humour. 

Bitmoji of Ba Blackstock

Tech & Tonic Episode 4 feat. Adam Lobo – More COVID-19 Stuff and #BatteryGate

In this week’s Tech & Tonic Podcast, we have Adam Lobo of Adam Lobo TV! Adam Lobo is the lead vocalist in the rap metal band Dragon Red. Adam Lobo’s gift does not just stop at his voice though. He makes great looking contents on his YouTube channel too when he is not jamming out with the band. His love and passion in tech led him to create his own YouTube channel where he reviews the latest gadgets you can buy in the Malaysian market. If you want to see devices in 4K detail, you should definitely check out his channel.

Last week we saw big events in the tech industry being cancelled. We say that they are being cancelled, most of them have moved things online (as in livestreaming) instead. Microsoft’s MVP conference, Facebook F8 Summit, Adobe Summit, Google Cloud Next, Google I/O 2020 are just the few events that has been cancelled due to COVID-19 (there is a new official name now) concerns. How is this going to affect the tech landscape? What about other industries?

We also saw the most valuable brand in the world getting into some trouble with the law. Apple has been caught up in their court battle for a while now and the court has decided that Apple should be fined and pay out almost half a billlion U.S. Dollars in compensation to the victims of their deliberate software throttling. As far as we know, this only applies to the U.S. market. There is more to this though.

techENT Download | OPPO Find X2, Realme C3, BlackShark 3, More COVID-19 news and even more tech!

In this week’s Download weekly round-up we have the Realme C3, Realme 6 series, the BlackShark 3 series, and the OPPO A31. We are expecting to see the OPPO Find X2 as soon as Tuesday, so stay tuned to that.

The Realme C3 is Realme’s 2020 answer to the fast growing entry-level smartphones market. It is sold for MYR 499 and packs all the basic goodies to make it a smartphone. The Realme 6 series launched in India but we are expecting to make an appearance in Malaysia pretty soon. Same goes to the extravagance that is the Black Shark 3 series. The Black Shark 3 is a quite a recipe though with pop-up triggers and Qualcomm’s super powerful Snapdragon 865 SoC.

Oppo has launched their entry level MYR 699 OPPO A31 in Malaysia as well. That would be accompanied by the OPPO Find X2 flagship with Qualcomm’s Snapdragon 865 SoC pushing the 120Hz 2K display. Even the camera set-up looks impressive, even if it is just three lenses instead of four or five.

Meanwhile, COVID19 shuts down more than just MWC. Microsoft MVP, Facebook F8, Adobe Summit, Google Next Cloud, and Google I/O has all been cancelled due to COVID-19 concerns. Computex is still happening though currently.

For more information or reporting a COVID-19 case in Malaysia you can head to any of their links; (Charges apply) www.moh.gov.my, www.doctoroncall.com.my/coronavirus, and www.bookdoc.com.

We had Isa Rodriguez of Isa Does Tech on our podcast last week! Do head to the link to give a listen. We are also excited to have Adam Lobo from Adam Lobo TV over in our podcast in the coming week.

Tech & Tonic Episode 3 feat. Isa Rodriguez – Camera or Smartphone Cameras?

In this episode of Tech & Tonic, we have Isa Rodriguez of Isa Does Tech, her very own YouTube channel. As a tech reviewer, she is one of the more unique ones. She does not just review the tech, but also how it pairs with the lifestyle side of things. In that sense, it is a very unique and interesting approach to tech.

We spoke at length about the many smartphone launches that happened over the past week including the very anticipated and expensive HUAWEI Mate Xs. That is one eye catching device, since it is a foldable device and approaches the foldable device concept differently.

We also discussed about the Sony Xperia 1 Mk. II that really caught our eyes. We think that it is one heck of a device for creators. It is really Sony’s premium smartphone reloaded.

The war between proper cameras and smartphones continues though. Is it better to buy a super high-end smartphone, or is it better to spend some of that money to buy a camera, an interchangeable lens camera maybe. We all agreed that it really depends on what we are looking for in our smartphones or even cameras. Which is superior? Find out with Tech & Tonic Podcast.

techENT Download |AMD Feels the Heat, Sony Ups the Ante with Xperia 1 II, HUAWEI Mate Xs & more

Here’s the TechENT Download for the week of 24th February. Boy was it an eventful one for tech! Here’s run down of some of the most pertinent tech news of the week!

AMD Feels the heat from ASUS as the Strix RX 5700 overheats after the company’s recommended settings didn’t cut it for cooling.

Sony releases a slew of devices spearheaded by the Xperia 1 II to usher in a new age of mobile with a focus on Content Creators. Together with the Xperia 1 II, they also announced a new Xperia 10 II and Xperia L4 completing their offerings for the mobile segment.

HUAWEI showed the world how to fold with its Mate Xs. The new foldable spearheaded a whole line up of MateBook D and the new MateBook X Pro laptops and the new MatePad Pro. While HTC is making a come back with its new Wildfire.

More updates as we’re hearing more developments around the COVID-19 impact on the tech industry. This time, it looks like it’s Microsoft saying that its being affected.

We’ve started a new Podcast, techENT’s Tech & Tonic! The new podcast will see us talk about some of the most interesting news and topics in tech with some of our friends in the industry. It is available on Spotify, Anchor, Google Podcast, Apple Podcast, Breaker, and other podcasting host channels! If we are not yet on your favourite channel yet, let us know in the comments so that we can work our way there!

Photography is the Word – The Case of Replacing Your Camera with Smartphones; Should You?

Photography is a wonderful thing. Everyone loves a good photo. A good photo can be shared with the world to convey stories, to eternalise important moments, to remember. It allows you to see the world or environment as someone else does. It allows you to express yourself too. A Picture speaks a thousand words they say; and it still rings true. 

We also always believe that photography is the fundamentals of any visually related productions. Videos, for example, are just compilations of several thousand photographed frames put together side by side to create a bigger, clearer, and more specific story. Illustrations are merely a photograph of your imagination put into a canvas.  

The Tool of the Trade 

For years, photography holds a very significant place in humanity. It captures our pivotal movements, it captures history. It keeps our legacy, our memories, our achievements in a single piece of paper that it prints on.  

Photo by Anthony DELANOIX on Unsplash

Back then, when the first camera was introduced, cameras are huge equipment that can hardly be carried around. Setting them up takes time, getting a good amount of light is also crucial to get the best photos. After all, photography is merely an act of capturing light. 

When the handheld camera was introduced, it became a sensation for photographers; now they can carry their gear anywhere and work wherever, whenever. It was a simple hardware with a mirror inside and sensor to capture light. It was rudimentary and colourless still; pretty much black and white. If you need extra lights, you need to carry around a large flash tool as well that explodes (sort of) in people’s faces to give them light. 

A little later they manage to attach the flash module to the camera. It is still no small thing though. It still looks like it could replace your sling bag and weighs more than the average camera today.  

The Modern Tool for the Modern Photographer 

Today, if you get into the field of photography, you will be spoiled for choice. There are always two camps in photography; those who prefers the ways of films, and those who champions digital photography. Yes, there are those that has both types of gear; let’s face it though; you will have to start choosing at one point to go with either film or digital. Most professionals have moved to digital photography thanks to the flexibility and simplicity of the format. There is the matter of long term costs as well.

We do understand the appeal of film photography though. There is a very classic feel when you hold a film camera. With films, every shutter press matters, every press counts. A wasted shot is a shot you will never get back. You get a sort of warm, fuzzy feeling when you see a printed film photograph. It is just irreplaceable.

Photo by Randy Graf on Unsplash

Yes, even in a film camera, the sensor size plays a little bit of a role in the sort of photos you get too. There are even wide-angle format films to fit ultra-wide sensors in the film camera. In general, films in general produce higher detail shots with less distortion. Depending on lens filters, sensor types, film conditions, and sensor condition, film cameras can have more accurate colour reproduction too.  

Then there is the digital camera, the modern tool for the modern photographer, be it an enthusiast or a professional. To be fair, when the format was first introduced many years ago it was not very good. Thanks to the heavy reliance on megapixels, which are basically the number of dots that you can cram in a photo, the large sensors that does not have that many pixels packed together was not very good.  

Photo by JESHOOTS.com from Pexels

The digital camera has evolved to the point that we cannot imagine a world without digital cameras. You have the new Sony Alpha 7 R Mark IV with more than 50-Megapixel (64-Megapixel to be specific) crammed into its full-frame sensor; something quite unheard of before. That could spell trouble, but then again, we have come to a point where full frame sensors are kings. We are also beginning to find out the limits of the full frame sensor – how much we can push the full frame format. 

The Modern Pocket All-in-One 

Then there is something we carry in our pockets everyday these days; the smartphone. These days, the stress and emphasis that I put on the camera performance of that little thing in your pockets are tremendous, ridiculous even. This was quite inevitable too though, not thanks to demand; thanks to marketing, thanks to Apple, and Samsung, and HUAWEI, and HTC.  

Photo by Deny Abdurahman on Unsplash

There are several reasons why smartphone manufacturers push camera prowess and photo quality as their main selling point. One of the reasons would be technical, theoretical processing power of the device’s chipsets. Powering a camera requires a large amount of processing power. Processing a 12-Megapixel photo, for example, is quite unthinkable with phones that came out 10 years ago. At that time, you get devices with 5-Megapixel cameras and that is as good as you can get them. Even launching the camera application takes some time thanks to the lack of processing power those devices had.  

We can go into little details to why that is so. If we do though, you and I are going to have to do some maths, so let us not. To simplify it even further, take digital cameras that are taking continuous photos without stopping. You see full-fledge, expensive DSLRs taking up to 7 shots a second and then after a few more clicks. You will not get anymore clicks out of it until a little later. The processor built into the camera needs sometime to process the photos and store them into the memory card. 

Photo by Torsten Dettlaff from Pexels

Yes, a smartphone processor can complete that same task, in the case of a high-end processors, they could work just as well. Most of the time though, they would be a little lacking. Still, take a high-end smartphone and take continuous photos and you find that the device starts to slow down as well. Take a flagship that is a year to two years old, and you will find that it will be even slower, they sometimes fail too.  

Still, you get smartphones like the Xiaomi Mi Note 10 where they cram as much as 108-Megapixels from the little things you call a camera sensor in the smartphones and pass those as super high-end cameras that you can replace your full-frame Sony A7S II with. The Chinese brand manufacture in orange are not the first manufacturer to do that though. The other premium Chinese brand in red is also guilty of such far-fetched claims.  

The 108-Megapixel shooter on the Xiaomi Mi Note 10, to be fair, is not from the usual OEM, Sony. It is from a company that has been pushing the mobile technology like crazy, that is Samsung. Of course they installed the outrageous 108-Megapixel sensor on their very own Samsung Galaxy S20 Ultra. That is also the ultimate iteration of their own sensor, in their minds. In that device, you can use the sensor, combined with a 48-Megapixel sensor to zoom to about 30x factor. You start to lose detail though if you zoom in that close. They can digitally zoom to up to 100x too, but you really lose all details on that kind of zoom. Your hands would have to be as steady as a rock too.

In truth though, for most users, who only does photos for the #grams (Instagram), a smartphone like the Huawei P30 or even the Xiaomi Mi Note 10 is powerful enough. However, even if it is for Social Media, a proper camera would help plenty in the quality of your posted photos too; trust us. If you are a serious photographer though, be it a regular hobbyist, a semi-professional, or a professional, a smartphone camera is never enough. 

Size Matters 

Do not let anyone tell you otherwise; in photography, size matters. Well, sensor size matters in photography. The smaller they are, the less powerful they can be. At least that is the current predicament they are in.  

Photo by Alexander Andrews on Unsplash

Bigger

There is a reason why the print industry goes for sensor sizes bigger than an odd smartphone battery. When you need to print a photo to be pasted to a billboard, you always need photos that comes from medium format cameras with Megapixel counts that go over 50. That is because medium format cameras captures light better, in turn; you get highly detailed photos with near true to life scale. That way, when you are printing a photo taken out of a medium format camera, you can get a billboard size printout and still get amazingly sharp details from the photo.  

Photo by Pierre Châtel-Innocenti on Unsplash

The smaller you go, the less light the sensor can absorb. Well, it is just the law of physics; there is less surface area that captures light. Because of that, you get blurred out details when you go closer to the photos, when you zoom in. You get softer lines, less defined structures. It might be fine if you are taking a photo of a landscape or landmark. If you want to take portraits of a person though, you want to capture those lines, those creases on the skin, the hair folicles. That is why medium format is still the way to go for when your industry needs a large print.  

Big

Of course, the most popular format in the professional scene is still the full-frame that we are quite used to. That in itself has the advantage of being lighter and smaller than the medium format. Plus, plenty of the lenses you can get your hands on in the market are made for full-frame lenses. 

Source: Petapixel

A full-frame sensor though is quite a little bit smaller than medium format. That means that it captures less light, and theoretically should not be pushed past 50-Megapixel. The more megapixel you cram in, the more problems with capturing light you have. There is a reason why Sony’s A7R III camera does not do that well in low-light conditions as compared to the 12-Megapixel Sony A7S III. Still, better than small sensors like APS-C cropped frame sensors, right? 

Small

APS-C sensors exist because people want even more compact cameras and they want interchangeable lens cameras for less money. That is not to say that professionals or enthusiasts cannot use them. Take Sony’s brilliant A6500, or Canon’s M6, or Fujifilm’s highly popular X-T series. Those are brilliant APS-C cameras that are made for not just enthusiasts, even professionals can use them, especially if they are mostly reproducing their work in digital formats; you really do not need more than an APS-C in most cases. Of course, you still get better result with a full-frame or a medium format; if you have the money for them. 

Even Smaller

So, what if you cram all that you need in an even smaller sensor, a sensor you can fit into a smartphone. You are getting a sensor smaller than your modern MicroSD cards, smaller than the NanoSIM format. The light captured from such a small sensor is even less. That also means that you are really not getting any kind of significant details from a single photo. The only way for the software in your smartphone to produce any significant photos you can use is to mash a couple of photos of the same things and fill the details in with those photos. In essence, you are super sampling your photos. That can be quite taxing on your smartphone’s processors though, and that is why your smartphone’s camera slows down and fails after a while (my own Samsung Galaxy Note9 has done it a few times).

The worst part is that the small sensors are not supposed to do any good in low-light photography. The only way you are going to see good low-light photos on a sensor as small as the ones in a modern smartphone is thanks to some software trickery within your smartphone and its processing chip. Technically, that is what your smartphone does anyway; again, that is why your smartphone’s camera slows down after a year or two.  

Photography Essential? Or Snob Photography? 

We are not pointing out any single camera mind you, we are talking about proper cameras in general. There are good ones, and there are bad ones that you can buy in the market. Generally, you will not go wrong with the reputable ones like Sony, or Canon, or Nikon, or Fujifilm. There are other brands in the market obviously, like Leica for example, who makes stellar cameras as well; for a price. There are also people like Hasselblad and Mamiya that does professional grade, medium format stuff. If you are looking into videography, there are brands like RED or BlackMagic that does their stuff very well too. Let us stick to photography for now though. 

Control is Everything

Photo by Kelly Sikkema on Unsplash

While many may argue that the smartphones’ cameras have caught up to DSLRs; I respectfully disagree. Getting a proper camera gives you plenty more control over your shots, you get a larger ISO range, larger aperture range, higher exposure control, more control over shutter speeds, and more control over your image focus. You get to play with more lenses too, although you have to fork out plenty more money for that (they are worth it, trust me). On a smartphone camera, while you get to shoot in RAW and have more control in ‘Pro’ mode, the ranges of control are just not enough, even the latest Xiaomi Mi Note 10 has its own limitations.  

On a DSLR, or a mirrorless system that is ever so popular right now, if you need a larger lens opening, you can swap your lens out to another lens with larger aperture, which incidentally gives you better depth of field effect too (bokeh). Need low-light shots? Find a tripod, slow down the shutter speed, open up the lens aperture, push the ISO higher and you get a nice photo at night. Some cameras are equipped with backlight boost these days too. Need to zoom in a little closer than normal? There are zoom lenses equipped for that. Need to focus on a subject that is off-center? Sure, you can manually adjust the focus or let the autofocus do its job; plain and simple. 

The Ends Justifies The Means

You most likely get better results from proper DSLRs too. You get better details in any lighting conditions comparatively. Depending on manufacturers, you get better colours too, and they are consistent. Thanks to better control over your settings, you also get the same results every time, anytime. You have more control over your photos, means you can take more photos and just choose the ones that you like most.  

The memory card you have in your camera is dedicated to taking in photos and videos from the camera too, so there is no need to worry that your photos are taking up more space that it should. If you need to colour correct, there are tools on your smartphones to do that; since most modern cameras are equipped with Bluetooth and WiFi for image transfer and shutter remote.  

Size Still Matters

The only downside in all these is the fact that a dedicated camera, even a mirrorless camera is still much larger than a modern smartphone. They are much heavier too, these cameras. If you consider a regular set up for most photographers (one camera body with up to two prime lenses and a single zoom lens), you need a proper bag to carry them. A smartphone just needs your pocket. Still, if you do have a gear bag for your camera and its gears, you have some more space for a notebook PC to work with and more than just a smartphone.  

Essentially

Photo by Andrik Langfield on Unsplash

In our humble opinions then, a proper camera still has its place in photography. In fact, if you are getting into photography and is considering to get a high-end smartphone or a camera, we will always recommend you to get a cheaper smartphone and a proper camera set-up instead. A proper camera will always give you better results and more creative freedom and control than any smartphone camera. It is true now, and it should still stay true through 2020 and a few more years to come. We might revisit this topic again way later though. For now, the proper camera is still photography essential. What do you think though? We would love to hear thoughts in the comments! 

techENT Download | Coronavirus hits Apple, Windows Gets a Makeover and more

We wrap up the third week of #February 2020 in this #techENT #techENTDownload #techenttv! Boy, hasn’t it been a little quiet in tech this wee?. No matter though, we still bring you the latest things you need to know for the week starting with #Google banning over 600 apps in their #PlayStore to #Cadillac launching their brand new and first even electric vehicle for the world to see; Malaysia might not get it though. Still, at least we are definitely getting into the #Samsung #GalaxyZFlip!

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