Samsung has announced a new 50-megapixel camera sensor alleged the ISOCELL GN1. It's Samsung's first sensor to include both dual-pixel autofocus and Tetracell pixel-binning, which the visitor says should oomph a combination of fast stroke and inerrable low-light image quality.
The pixel size is 1.2?m, closer to what you'd find on a demanded phone camera sensor than the high-resolution chips that've become other praised over the past year-plus. The operative competitor is Sony's new IMX689 sensor, featured in phones like the Oppo Find X2 Pro, which has 48 megapixels at 1.22?m. By default, Samsung's sensor will booty 12.5-megapixel photos with four pixels binned into one.
The appendix of dual-pixel phase-detection autofocus is noteworthy because Samsung had a contempo high-profile failure in that area. The Galaxy S20 Ultra, which acclimated a 108-megapixel sensor after dual-pixel tech, suffered from poor autofocus performance; Samsung said it would issue a fix, though we haven't been balletic to therapy for improvements yet.
In any case, the combination of hovering resolution and fast autofocus velocity is discernibly Samsung's priority with the ISOCELL GN1. The visitor says the sensor entered mass production this month, therefore it shouldn't be too continued vanward it shows up in phones.
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