Smartphone cameras eating away
at the market share of dedicated digital cameras is old news. On and off over the past few years, digital camera makers such as Canon, Nikon and Sony, to name a few, comment on this sad state of affairs. Their solution to the problem? Offer smartphone users something more, quality, and maybe a zoom lens. Unfortunately, it does seem like they’re barking up the wrong tree. To quote many a famed
photographer, “the camera’s only job is to get out of the way of making photographs” and, “The best camera you can use is the one that you have on you.” At the same time, the need for quality is not paramount. A brief history lesson When it comes to photography, our needs have evolved. In the days of film, simply having the ability to capture images was great and since the advent of the Internet, the ability to share has been paramount. Most smartphone cameras
these days are capable of churning out some very reasonable images
and since the quality is acceptable, it’s more than enough for Facebook, Instagram and the like. In the early days of the digital camera, image quality was terrible when compared to film. Even a 2MP digital camera was considered ground-breaking, a far cry from the 25MP that could be achieved by scanning even “amateur-grade” 35mm film. But digital still persisted and survived, if only for the fact that it started getting easier and easier to view and share digital images. Using film started to become a niche, expensive and unwieldy operation. Wouldn’t you say the same for a DSLR today? By the early 2000s we saw a repeat of the exact same story. Smartphones were bad at capturing images, but it was much easier to view and share them so users compromised with quality. Fast-forward to 2016 and now smartphone image quality is excellent and viewing and sharing images is easier than it’s ever been. It’s what the users want and it’s what they’re getting. Image quality can only improve over time and we’re already seeing a slow trickle of smartphones with better zoom
levels. Digital cameras aren’t dead, they’re niche