Lenovo CEO Chen Jin has confirmed that Motorola’s new flagship will feature a large 1/1.22-inch camera sensor. This will probably be the much-discussed Samsung ISOCELL HP1 image sensor.
Camera violence
Last May, Motorola confirmed that it will be announcing a new flagship that will set “a new benchmark for your photography experience.” The company did not disclose which camera sensor the device will receive, but now they are giving a small hint about this. The general manager of Lenovo, the company that makes the Motorla phones, says that the new Motorola flagship will have a large 1/1.22-inch camera sensor. So reports Android Police† He does not indicate which sensor it will be, but everything seems to point to the Samsung ISOCELL HP1 image sensor. Several rumors have already been circulated about this and it is also added that this sensor has a size of 1/1.22-inch.
The Samsung ISOCELL HP1 is a high-end 200 MP sensor that can merge four or sixteen pixels. So the sensor uses 4×4 or 2×2 pixel binning technology. The device therefore takes standard photos with a resolution of 12.5 or 50 MP. You can read more about the camera sensor in the article below.
Other specifications
Motorola previously revealed that the Motorola Frontier, Edge 30 Ultra or X30 Pro (name is still not fully known) will have the Qualcomm Snapdragon 8 + Gen 1 processor. Qualcomm’s fastest processor right now. The device should also have a 144 Hz Full HD + OLED panel with curved edges. The battery of the device will be a 4500 mAh model that can be charged with a power of 125W.
The device will probably have to be officially announced this month. It is expected that the device will first be available in China, and later on sale in other countries. The price of the device is not yet known.
Learn more about Motorola’s upcoming flagship here
- Motorola reveals: phone with 200 MP camera coming in July’
- Motorola Edge 30 Ultra gets 200 MP camera and 125W fast charging’
- ‘Motorla Frontier with 200 MP camera leaked in photo’
– Thanks for information from Androidworld. Source