Being an avid photographer myself, I was particularily interested to see how the N82’s camera fares – after all, the device managed to take home a CIPA award. But can it stack up(click the images for native versions)?

Hardware-wise, the camera is excellently equipped. A Carl Zeiss lense provides the focussing, a 5MP sensor does the actual imaging. Last but not least, a real flash and a focus assist LED are thrown in to simplify working in low-light conditions.

The first test image was an indoor shot of the ficus in my main office(shared with abc texte) – the leaves are somewhat sharp, but pretty noisy:
0a The Nokia N82 review   the camera

After that, I went on to make a few shots with the macro mode(must be activated manually). Both of them turned out well focussed, although the Treo’s keys are a bit noisy:
1a The Nokia N82 review   the camera 1b The Nokia N82 review   the camera

Moving on to flash: my classic test bookshelf has turned out pretty well. Of course, a digital camera manages a better picture(where the book covers can actually be read) – but for a camera phone, the N82’s performance is superb:
2a The Nokia N82 review   the camera

A completely dark bedroom(6m long) was lit up well, although noise levels got out of control:
3a The Nokia N82 review   the camera

Finally, an image of a brightly lit house made with night mode. The capture time is pretty long – getting a sharp image is easiest via burst mode. Nevertheless, the images aren’t as crisp as the ones from a digital camera:
5a The Nokia N82 review   the camera 5b The Nokia N82 review   the camera

The burst mode of the camera is excellent(even though a bit slow at approx 0.5FPS/sec when saving 5MP pics to RAM) – it allows you to fill up the available memory completely..


Related posts:

  1. The Nokia N78 review – camera
  2. The Nokia N81 8GB review – camera
  3. Nokia E63 review – camera
  4. Nokia N96 preliminary review – camera shoot-out
  5. Samsung INNOV8 – camera torture test