Let's see some photos taken with your s60 phone!

o m f g that Z06 is completely gorgeous.

And a BMW, looks like a 5 or 7 series?

Nice garage, but it looks like the ground never sees any gear oil!
 
3472622710_98bfac8c97.jpg

3471822371_24c1708b23.jpg

3472630530_1bdb6ae0e9.jpg


http://flickr.com/tehcypress for more
 
In keeping with the auto-related theme, here's a pic I took of my 2000 Passat speedometer/odometer when it got to 123,456 miles last month. I just couldn't miss the opportunity, but unfortunately, I was driving at the time and had nowhere to pull over, so I had to take it on the go; but I wasn't texting :lol:
Also got to love the 31.8 avg mpg on the 1.8L turbo engine.
Taken with my N82 held in one hand.



:befuddled Not sure how to paste the image, so here's the link:
http://share.ovi.com/media/tncc01.public/tncc01.10229
 
T61 is what I use for work. However the newest model no longer has the IR port. Now the IR ports on my Nokia phones are completely worthless (they used to be only worthless when I wasn't at work or didn't have my work laptop nearby). Now I hope I never see one ever again.
 
I'd be interested to see how it handles a darker scene. I'm just thinking that the metering is just a bit off. is there EV adjustment on the iPhone? You could just bump that up a bit.

That might be a bad example as well, the white would throw it off to be fairly dark. I would pick a more neutral scene, (maybe one of the pavement) and then judge accordingly. Most likely it's just a software issue. But I'd rather have that underexposed than overexposed as I mentioned earlier. You can see almost no detail is lost on the smart car's paint. It's just a super soft photo. :)

more white should make the scene darker, more black should make the scene brighter. It's just the way the metering works. The camera is going to try to make everything a 18% gray.

it looks like the iPhone has a pretty small dynamic range. I'll have to see how the N86 stacks up against a real digital camera as well.
 
Back
Top