The Panasonic Lumix CM1 is a camera with a Lecia DC lens, a 1 inch, 20.1 megapixel image sensor, and an f/2.8 aperture. Oh yeah, it’s also an Android phone.
Panasonic unveiled the Lumix CM1 at CES in January, and now it’s available for pre-order from Adorama and B&H. But mashing together a good camera and a decent phone doesn’t come cheap: the Lumix CM1 sells for $1000.
What you get for that price is a smartphone with a 4.7 inch, 1920 x 1080 pixel display, a Qualcomm Snapdragon 801 processor, 2GB of RAM, 16GB of built-in storage, and a microSDXC card slot. It has 802.11ac WiFi, Bluetooth 4.0, NFC, GPS, and support for GSM and 4G LTE networks.
The phone runs Android 4.4 KitKat software, which feels a bit dated. But it includes a custom camera app which is designed to work with a physical control ring to give you more control over camera settings. There’s support for manual aperture, shutter, and other controls. The phone has a physical camera shutter button, and a 23-point autofocus system.
You can record 4K videos at 15 frames per second or full HD video at 30 frames per second, and you can review 4K videos frame-by-frame to extract and save an image from a video. So it’s kind of like having a burst mode that can capture 15 frames per second.
Do those features justify the $1000 asking price? Maybe. You could probably save a few bucks by purchasing a smartphone and a camera separately — but the best camera is the one that you always have with you. So if you constantly find yourself snapping pictures with your phone and wish that your phone had a better camera and more support for manual controls, there aren’t many other devices in the same class as the Lumix CM1.
On the other hand, if you just want a phone with an iconic camera brand name on the box, the Kodak IM5 which was also unveiled at CES is now available for purchase… in the Netherlands. It’s a much less impressive device though.
via Android Central and Photo Rumors
Hold on, I have to answer my camera!
It has a F 2.8 lens? The latest flagships from Samsung and LG do better than that. It would be interesting to see photos from all three compared.
It has a sensor 4 times the size of those in Samsung and LG phones, that’s 2 stops of exposure. The 2 stops equivalent of F2.8 aperture is F1.4. There are plenty of samples online, the picture quality is significantly better than cell phones in both low light and base ISO.
2 stops of more light goes a long way in helping smartphone photography in the neverending battle for more stable handheld pictures, but it doesn’t help it in the depth-of-field department.