Mobile Technology

Motorola goes camera crazy with 200-megapixel Edge 30 Ultra smartphone

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Bigger than all the rest: the 200-megapixel main camera on the flagship Edge 30 Ultra
Motorola
Bigger than all the rest: the 200-megapixel main camera on the flagship Edge 30 Ultra
Motorola
The Edge 30 Ultra is powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 mobile platform supported by up to 12 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage
Motorola
The FHD+ OLED display features a 60-MP hole-punch selfiecam up top that's capable of 4K/30p video
Motorola
The IP52-rated Edge 30 Ultra sports an aluminum frame sandwiched between Corning Gorilla Glass 5 front and back
Motorola
The triple camera array around back is made up of a 200-MP main, 50-MP ultrawide with macro capabilities and 12-MP telephoto, while the 60-MP selfiecam can shoot 4K video at 30 fps
Motorola
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Back in June, Samsung gave us our first glimpse of the kind of lunacy we can expect from a 200-megapixel smartphone camera sensor, and now Motorola is first to market with an actual handset rocking a 200-MP rear camera – the flagship Edge 30 Ultra.

Clearly the headline act here is the monstrous 200-MP camera module around the back – an industry first – which focuses light through a F1.9 aperture to a relatively large 1/1.22-inch sensor and benefits from optical image stabilization. Motorola is promising "crisp, bright images even in the dark" thanks to technology that combines 16 small pixels in a large 2.56µm Ultra Pixel to capture more light.

As well as huge image chops, the camera will also enable recording of 8K UHD video at 30 frames per second, or 4K UHD at up to 60 fps and 960 fps slow-mo at FHD. The main camera is joined by a 50-MP ultrawide (with macro capabilities) and a 12-MP telephoto portrait lens with a narrow depth of field for beautiful bokeh.

The selfiecam out front is no less impressive at a whopping 60 megapixels for 4K video at 30 fps. That front camera is punched into the top of the Ultra's 6.67-inch 2,400 x 1,080 near-bezel-free OLED display that boasts a refresh rate of 144 Hz, a touch response of 360 Hz and a peak brightness of 1,250 nits. There's support for 10-bit color, HDR10+ and the DCI-P3 color gamut as well as Snapdragon Elite Gaming.

The Edge 30 Ultra is powered by Qualcomm's Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 mobile platform supported by up to 12 GB of RAM and 256 GB of storage
Motorola

The IP52-splash-resistant handset features durable Corning Gorilla Glass 5 front and back with a sandblasted aluminum frame inbetween. Inside is Qualcomm's latest and greatest mobile platform, the Snapdragon 8+ Gen 1 chipset, and the Ultra can be had with up to 12 GB of LPDDR5 RAM and 256 GB of UFS 3.1 storage.

Two large Dolby Atmos speakers promise a "spatial sound experience that harnesses the latest advances in sound technology to connect users more deeply with their favorite content." And though many users will likely opt for private listening over Bluetooth 5.2, those who prefer a cabled connection are offered USB-C only.

Surfing and streaming is facilitated by 5G and Wi-Fi 6E, the Ultra runs Android 12 with My UX "for a personalized view of the things you do" and the 4,610-mAh battery supports 125-W wired fast charging for a day's worth of juice in just seven minutes, in addition to 50-W wireless charging and 10-W power sharing.

The flagship also comes with edge lighting for personalized at-a-glance visual notifications for such things as messages and calls, and data protection is provided by Lenovo's ThinkShield for Mobile technology.

The Edge 30 Ultra launches in Europe for a starting price of €899.99 (a little over US$900), with black or white being the available color choices. Other markets will follow in the coming weeks.

Product pate: Motorola Edge 30 Ultra

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10 comments
stevendkaplan
Ok but why though? Honestly there comes a certain point where having more pixels doesn’t really add anything to the image quality and I think we’ve long since passed that point. Unless we’re planning on putting these cameras on spy satellites or looking for new planets I don’t see the point in developing this tech for the commercial market any further.
P51d007
200 megapixels does NOT equate to "d-slr quality" photos. As a matter of fact, especially in low light situations it can present a poor quality photo.
The gain has to be turned up, resulting in noise, and then the camera software will try to compensate to knock out the noise and the AI will try to
make up for that resulting in a photo that is made up.
Even professional d-slr's don't have image sensors with that many pixels.
Heck, even my d-slr, with a cropped APS-C sensor tops out at 26 megapixels. And it will take better photos than a 200 MP sensor.
It's the SIZE of each pixel sensor, not how many you have, coupled with the GLASS (lens) on the front. Heck, one of my lenses costs
more than these phones! Granted the best camera is the one you have with you, but this megapixel race/war need to end, but, it won't.
"More is better" sells. And people still buy into it.
wowlfie
Too bad it doesn't have a 200x optical to go with it.
Polaris1983
Does the software in the phone.s camera app or in the google photos editing app have a hdr Dolby vision injector AI option feature to add in that or does it even exist for this non-hdr screen in these devices or in pc monitors or smart TVs here to convert live tv feeds into Dolby vision or HDR10 with 10-bit and 12-bit colors here after seeing youtube do 60hz on live MLB games yesterday?
c w
As a person who was interested in higher quality camera phone images back when that meant buying a Nokia... I think I am over imaging on mobile devices. I say this not because I am no longer interested in images, but because I think we are diluting the efficiency of phones and imaging devices by forcing my things into a smaller space while driving up prices of either.

Make a mobile that's a better mobile...and make me a media recording device that's really good and focused on being that. I've got enough pockets for both.

I'm not saying to not have some kind of image recording on the phone, and I'm not saying to not have some kind of communication ability on an imaging device. I'm just saying maybe it's time to stop focusing on trying to cram everything of either into one device. My phone gets hot enough as it is.
Whitezb
The appeal of the curved screen has long since worn off. The difficulty of protecting the screens is more trouble than it is worth. The camera is over-rated. Anyone who actually needs those specs isn't taking photos or video with their phone. Ultimately, it seems to be a lot of fluff.
WB
As Descartes would say: "Cui Bono?"
WB
While I do firmly believe and have seen that BIGGER is always better!! I don't think this would apply here to Mega Pixels... however it does apply to sensor size!
NMBill
Maybe I've missed it somewhere, but I have never yet seen a camera phone, even on flagship models, that does a decent job of capturing faces in a brightly backlit situation. Maybe in pro mode, but most of us aren't pros. We want to grab the phone, snap the photo and get an excellent result.
IanW
The pictures will be the same ... you will just need more memory to save them lol