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 CNET reviews the Nokia N80 and comments on the phone's camera: "The mobile sports a 3-megapixel camera with video-recording capabilities and 20X digital zoom. The breadth of customization and editing options available on this phone is astounding. You can choose from eight shooting modes, ranging from portrait to sports to night portrait, and five resolutions: 2,048x1,536, 1,600x1,200, 1,280x960, 800x600, and 640x480. You can tweak the brightness, contrast, white balance, color tone, and exposure value. There's also a self-timer and flash. The secondary camera is of only VGA quality, but then again, how often do you find a cell phone with two cameras? The shooting options are significantly reduced, with a mere two modes to choose from: automatic or night."
PCMag reviews the Nokia N80 and comments on the phone's camera: "It's pretty basic in terms of options: no optical zoom, no lens cap, no autofocus, and a standard, weak LED flash, but at least there's a macro switch. As with all camera phones, the pictures it takes are barely passable in the realm of dedicated digital cameras; they're soft, with only about 700 lines of resolution, a slightly hazy look, and some visible color noise. At first glance, you might think 2MP camera-phone shots like the ones from the Samsung MM-A800 look better. But that's because the MM-A800's shots are automatically digitally sharpened; the N80's extra pixels give you more realistic lines and color gradations. You can save pictures in the 40MB of onboard memory or on a mini-SD card, or beam them to a PC or printer using Wi-Fi, Bluetooth, or a USB cable. This is a huge step forward for camera phones."
Nokia N80
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