It's simple, virtually indestructible, and comes with Snake-- but what we really wanna know is, how does its camera hold up?
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Singapore photographer Xavier Lur took the iconic handset out for a try, and the results are pretty stunning:
Tweet may have been deleted
Admittedly, the photos look heavily filtered, but are still quite a sight to behold -- that is, if you don't look tooclosely.
Lur tells us he used Adobe Lightroom to edit the photos, then applied a VSCO filter on them for added effect.
Mashable Light SpeedWant more out-of-this world tech, space and science stories?Sign up for Mashable's weekly Light Speed newsletter.By signing up you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.Thanks for signing up!Credit: XAVIER LUR
Photos were shot using this phone. pic.twitter.com/dhO1c99gyA
— Xavier Lur (@xavierlur) October 16, 2017
"Based on today's standards, the camera isn't fantastic at all. Photos look pixelated, night photos will have a blue tint if you use the default auto white balance setting, and you have to hold the phone steady for around 2 seconds every time it takes a photo," he told Mashable.
And indeed, a quick zoom in on the pictures reveal that they are extremely pixelated by today's standards, although the quality of the two megapixel camera might not exactly come as a surprise.
Credit: XAVIER LUR
Lur thinks that the pictures, while not comparable to that of a modern smartphone, are still of a "decent" quality.
"The purpose of my tweet isn't to show that the camera is great. It's [to show] that you don't exactly need a high-end camera to take a decent photo."
Well said.
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