Similar to its predecessor, the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra will sport a 108-megapixel main camera with a 0.8μm pixel size, but this lens will pack a feature never been seen before on a smartphone — an Isocell HM3 sensor.
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The Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra’s camera upgrade
The Isocell HM3 sensor, an unprecedented smartphone feature, boosts enhanced camera performance in low-light environments, so Night Mode photos on the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra should be better than ever. This juicy rumor comes from reliable Twitter leaker @UniverseIce. However, according to the Twitter bean spiller, the Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra will drop its time-of-flight sensor (ToF), which means the smartphone’s ability to perceive depth will plunge. Depth perception heightens AR experiences and adds cool bells and whistles to smartphone photography and videography. The Samsung Galaxy S20+ and S20 Ultra, for example, is equipped with a ToF-supported Live focus video feature that lets users blur backgrounds in real time during video recording. The time-of-flight sensor can also determine the width, height, area and volume of objects, allowing users to quickly snag measurements of innumerable items. This isn’t the first time we’ve heard that the ToF sensor will get the boot. According to sources secured by Korean news outlet The Elec in August, Samsung decided to drop the ToF sensor because its technology is far behind Apple’s LiDAR scanner (an advanced ToF sensor) and there aren’t any compelling use cases for the ToF sensor. Even though the days of the ToF sensor are numbered, there’s still plenty to get excited about. In addition to the Isocell HM3 sensor, the Samsung Galaxy S21 series will reportedly have a performance boost and sport up to six cameras.