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Mobile Syrup

Samsung Galaxy S23 owners tell of blurry and smudged spots in photos

Despite a camera-focused update being released in April of 2023, several Galaxy S23 and S23+ users continue to face a hardware defect with the phone’s camera, with reported blurriness and smudging appearing in photos.

The problem seems to be affecting non-Ultra Galaxy S23 users, with some reporting seeing a blurry and smudged spot on the left side of all photos taken from the S23/S23+’s 50-megapixel primary camera in landscape orientation.

What may sound like a minuscule problem is made bigger by the fact that the affected area renders text unreadable, making documents and messages practically useless.

The Reddit user ‘Switch01‘ took to the social media site to complain about the hardware bug, as well as Samsung’s refusal to acknowledge the issue thus far.

Although big camera sensors in modern smartphones have been known to cause blurring across the edges of photos, more information has revealed that this is the problem plaguing certain S23s. The smudging has only been reported on the left side of the screen, with not all S23 users reporting a problem.

Additionally, the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra, which features a larger 200-megapixel primary camera does not display a blurriness problem.

With over a month passing since the initial complaints, the South Korean tech giant has not acknowledged the issue yet. Users who have sent their phones to the company for repair had the device returned in the same condition, with reports of Samsung claiming the problem was a characteristic of the big camera sensor rather than a hardware issue.

While an update that focused on the phone’s camera was released in April, it looks like users facing the dreaded photo blurring will have to wait for Samsung to take action toward rectifying the issue.

Source: Reddit ‘Switch01’ Via: Android Police

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Mobile Syrup

Samsung’s latest ISOCELL HP3 is the company’s second 200-megapixel sensor

Samsung unveiled the 200-megapixel ISOCELL HP1 image sensor in September of last year. Now, showing off its technical prowess, the tech giant has announced the upgraded ISOCELL HP3, which it says features the “industry’s smallest 0.56μm Pixel.”

The new ISOCELL HP3 is a 1/1.4-inch optical format camera sensor with a 200-megapixel resolution and 0.56μm pixel size. On the other hand, ISOCELL HP1 is a 1/1.22-inch sensor with a 0.64μm pixel size. According to Samsung, the 12 percent reduction in pixel size takes up less area and enables the sensor to be fitted in a wide variety of smartphones. Overall, the HP3 takes up 20 percent less space than HP1.

All of the sensor’s pixels are equipped with auto-focus capabilities, credited to Super QPD auto-focusing technology, and according to Samsung, the sensor focuses more quickly and accurately than its predecessors.

“The sensor also allows users to take videos in 8K at 30 frames-per-second (FPS) or 4K at 120FPS, with minimal loss in the field of view when taking 8K videos. Combined with the Super QPD solution, users can take movie-like cinematic footage with their mobile devices,” reads Samsung’s release about the new sensor. 

The sensor also utilizes pixel binning, which essentially means combining multiple pixels into one larger pixel. Samsung is calling the technology “Tetra2pixel,” wherein four pixels would combine into one pixel, essentially transforming the 0.56μm 200-megapixel sensor into a 1.12μm 50-megapixel sensor that can capture better low-light photos.

Additionally, the HP3 features Smart ISO Pro, which takes images by combining three conversion gains (high-ISO, mid-ISO, and low-ISO) for improved HDR performance. “Improved Smart-ISO Pro enables the sensor to express images in over 4 trillion colors (14-bit color depth), 64 times more colors than the predecessor’s 68 billion (12-bit),” says Samsung.

Samsung didn’t provide any image samples taken by the HP3 sensor, though it did say that mass production is set to begin this year, so we would likely see the sensor in next year’s flagship. Previous rumours suggest that the sensor will make its way to the consumer’s hand via the Galaxy S23 Ultra.

Image credit: Samsung

Source: Samsung