
Sony’s QX100 camera, which connects wirelessly to a cell phone, offers manual controls, optical image stabilization, a tripod mount, and a Zeiss f/1.8 lens.
Enlarge
Sonyâs concept for the new QX100 is among the most brilliant in its history.
Unfortunately, the good idea ended with the concept. By the time the poor QX100 reached the production line, it never really had a chance.
Oh, wait â you want to know what it is?
Itâs the answer to a long-simmering problem. Digital cameras take excellent photos but arenât good at transmitting them. Cell phones are great at sending pictures â but arenât very good at taking them.
Sonyâs masterstroke: Why not create a weird half-a-camera that contains exactly the components that a cell phone camera lacks?
It could have a lens that really zooms. It could contain serious, professional âglassâ â a Zeiss f/?1.8 lens, with the quality, multiple glass elements, and light-passing capacity that cell phones wouldnât have in their wildest dreams. It could have manual controls, optical image stabilization, and a tripod mount.
Above all, it could have a huge sensor, the digital âfilm.â This sensor could measure 1-inch diagonal â more than 40 times the size of a cell phoneâs sensor.
A large sensor gives you delicious amounts of detail, true colors, and exceptional clarity in low light. A big sensor means less blur because the shutter doesnât have to stay open long to let in enough light.
Megapixels, on the other hand, arenât a very big deal. Even so, Sonyâs semicamera could offer 18 or 20 megapixels â enough for even giant prints â compared with the 5 or 8 megapixels on your phone.
So thatâs what the QX100 ($500) is. Thereâs a half-priced junior version too. More on that in a minute.
The QX100 is the craziest-looking camera youâve ever seen. Even on close inspection, youâd swear it was just a lens. Not a whole camera â just a lens, like maybe one from somebodyâs SLR camera. Itâs a black cylinder, 2.2 inches long, 2.5 inches across.
Somehow, into that space, Sony has crammed most of a camera. Thereâs a 3X telescoping zoom with a zoom lever. Thereâs a real shutter button, a battery, stereo microphones, and a memory-card slot.
There is not, however, a screen, because your phone already has a huge, really great one. So between this lens thing and your phone, you have all the elements of a top-notch photographic machine.
The QX can snap onto a plate bearing rubber-lined grippers. Theyâre spring-loaded so they can firmly grip your phone. Thatâs right: You can actually attach a $500, semiprofessional zoom lens to your cell phone and take some truly excellent pictures.
To communicate with your phone, you install the clunkily named app, PlayMemories Mobile.
If you have an Android phone, and it came with an NFC (near-field communication) chip, you now just tap your phone against the QX100. That gesture âpairsâ them and opens the app, ready for shooting.

A couple use Sony’s QX100 camera to take a photo of themselves. The camera offers a variety of features, from a real shutter button to stero microphones to a memory-card slot and more.
Enlarge
If you have an iPhone or a non-NFC Android phone, things get trickier. Youâre supposed to connect your phone to the private Wi-Fi hot spot generated by the QX itself â which, in this case, has nothing to do with the Internet.
Once you have everything set up, the phoneâs screen acts as the lensâs viewfinder. Using touch controls on your phone, you can zoom in and out; take a picture by remote control; and adjust the exposure, automatic and program modes, plus aperture priority mode, manual focus, and white-balance options. It all works, although the camera takes part of a second to respond to your phone taps; you should not expect pinpoint timing with your zooming or shuttering.
The QX100 is based on the best pocket camera ever made, the Sony RX100 Mark II ($750). (The Mark II is the successor to the previous best pocket camera ever made, the RX100; the Mark II offers a tilting screen, Wi-Fi transmission to your phone, and even better lowlight photos.)
In other words, the QXâs pictures are truly terrific.
And remember: Just because the lens clips to your phone doesnât mean it has to. Itâs almost more fun to set it down in some awkward place to take pictures nobody else can get: in the crook of a tree, under a car, on a fence post above the crowd blocking your view of the concert. Once the lens is parked, you can stand somewhere nearby, viewing what it sees on your phone, controlling the zoom and exposure and taking remote-controlled photos.
You can even use the QX without the phone, although you canât see what youâre shooting. You aim by hand and hope for the best.
Each photoâs full-resolution self is stored on the lensâ memory card. A 2-megapixel, more easily uploaded and stored version is transmitted into your phone. (Sony reasons that sending the full 20-megapixel versions would swamp your phoneâs storage, although you can change the appâs settings to do just that.)
The QX records movies. They donât get sent to your phone; they stay on the lensâ memory card. You can transfer them to your computer using the USB cable, which you also use to recharge the lensâ 200-shot battery.
All this works identically on the 18-megapixel QX10, the less expensive sibling. It costs half as much; itâs about half as long and much lighter; and it zooms 10X instead of 3X.
But the QX10 doesnât offer anything like the photographic excellence of the QX100. Its sensor is no bigger than the ones on standard pocket cameras. Its lens isnât Zeiss glass, and itâs no f/?1.8. And it offers no manual controls except exposure compensation.
And now, the bad news. As it turns out, the QX camerasâ execution just doesnât live up to the ingenious idea behind them. Some problems:
? The camera requires a cell phone-style memory card, a microSD card (not included), which is about the size of a fingernail clipping.
? Neither âcameraâ has a flash. And no, you canât use your phoneâs flash to compensate.
? The sensor and lens of the QX100 are the same as whatâs in the RX100 Mark II, but itâs otherwise missing a lot of that cameraâs features. The QX100 lacks a burst mode, shutter-priority mode, self-timer mode, Illustration mode, and the amazing Sweep Panorama.
? Both cameras take only JPEG photos. They canât capture RAW files, beloved by professional photographers for their editability, as the RX100 can.
? The PlayMemories app doesnât let you review pictures youâve just taken. You have to switch into your cameraâs Photos app for that.
? In iOS 7, the iPhone app is balky, freezy, and unreliable.
? Connecting an iPhone or non-NFC Android phone to the QXâs private hot spot requires a complex password, which comes printed on the inside of the QXâs battery-compartment cover.
And so, in the end, the compromises and lag and rough edges of the QX lens-cameras wind up sabotaging much of what makes the idea so brilliant.
But listen: Letâs not mope. Letâs celebrate the spirit of that spectacular central idea, the master engineers who brought it to life, and even the executives who greenlighted this crazy, offbeat product. Letâs hope that spirit survives long enough for us to see a QX 2.0 next year.
Article source: http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2424615,00.asp
Sony"s offbeat QX100 connects wirelessly to cell phone and it"s brilliant
No comments:
Post a Comment