Nokia Lumia 1020

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Nokia Lumia 1020

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Nokia Lumia 1020
Nokia Lumia 1020 BG removed.png
Rear side of Nokia Lumia 1020 with the 41 MP camera
Brand Nokia
Manufacturer Nokia
Series Lumia
Compatible networks 2.5G GSM/GPRS/EDGE – 850, 900, 1800, 1900 MHz
3G UMTS/DC-HSPA+ – 850, 900, 1900, 2100 MHz
4G LTE Rel. 8 (UE Cat 3) – 700, 800, 900, 1800, 2100, 2600 MHz
First released 26 July 2013; 6 months ago
Availability by country 26 July 2013; 6 months ago (USA)
15 August 2013; 6 months ago (China)
Predecessor Nokia 808 PureView
Related Nokia Lumia 920
Nokia Lumia 925
Nokia Lumia 928
Type Smartphone
Form factor Bar
Dimensions 130.4 mm (5.13 in) H
71.4 mm (2.81 in) W
10.4 mm (0.41 in) D
14.5 mm (0.57 in) Bulge
Weight 158 g (5.6 oz)
Operating system Windows Phone 8
System on chip Qualcomm Snapdragon S4
CPU 1.5 GHz dual-core Qualcomm Krait
GPU Qualcomm Adreno 225
Memory 2 GB RAM
Storage 32 GB/64 GB internal flash
Battery Rechargeable BV-4NW 2000mAh Li-ion battery,
Qi inductive charging (with wireless charging cover)
Data inputs Multi-touch capacitive touchscreen, gyroscope, magnetometer, proximity sensor, 3D-accelerometer
Display 4.5" AMOLED RGBG PenTile[1] ClearBlack capacitive touchscreen with Gorilla Glass 3,
1280 × 768 pixels at 334 ppi, 15:9 aspect ratio
Rear camera 41 Mpx (1/1.5" i.e. 2/3") BSI sensor w/ Carl Zeiss optics,
f/2.2, autofocus,
Optical image stabilization;
Xenon flash,
LED video light;
RAW Image Capture (Adobe DNG);
1080p video capture @ 30fps
Front camera 1.3 MP, 1280×960 px,
720p video capture @ 30fps
Connectivity
Other Talk time:
2G: 19.1 hours
3G: 13.3 hours
Standby:
606 hours (about 25.2 days)
Website US: Nokia Lumia 1020
UK: Nokia Lumia 1020
Nokia Lumia 1020 equipped with the optional PD-95G camera grip
The Nokia Lumia 1020 is a Windows Phone 8 smartphone developed by Nokia, first unveiled on 11 July 2013 at a Nokia event at New York. It contains Nokia's PureView technology, a pixel oversampling (a data binning technique) that reduces an image taken at full resolution into a lower resolution picture, thus achieving higher definition and light sensitivity, and enables lossless zoom. It improves on Nokia's previous versions of PureView by coupling a new 41-megapixel 2/3-inch BSI sensor with optical image stabilization (OIS), and a high resolution f/2.2 all-aspherical 1-group Carl Zeiss lens.
It is the successor of the Nokia 808 PureView.
In January 2014, Nokia released the ‘Black’ firmware update for the Lumia 1020, adding various new features, including improved image processing and support for RAW (DNG) files.[2]

PureView Pro camera

PureView Pro is an imaging technology used in the Nokia 1020 device. It is the combination of a 1/1.5" large, very high resolution 41 mpx image sensor with high performance Carl Zeiss optics. The large sensor enables pixel oversampling, which means the combination of many sensor pixels into one image pixel. PureView imaging technology delivers high image quality, lossless zoom, and improved low light performance (see below). It dispenses with the usual scaling/interpolation model of digital zoom used in virtually all smartphones. In both video and stills, this technique provides greater zoom levels as the output picture size reduces, enabling 4× lossless zoom in full HD 1080p video, 6x lossless zoom for 720p HD. Optical image stabilization is also present to nullify shaking of hands when taking a photo and to allow significantly more light to enter the sensor for better low light photos. It also has a shutter speed of 1/16,000 s.
Some reviewers have noted the camera may exhibit lens flare[3][4] and minor white balance issues under particular circumstances.[5][6]
It has a camera startup of 6.1 seconds and a shot-to-shot time of 3.6 seconds for 5 mpx photos and 4.2 seconds for 38 mpx photos.[7]

PureView Pro specifications

Sensor
The Nokia Lumia 1020 has a 41.3-megapixel BSI CMOS image sensor, 1/1.5-inch (2/3-inch) image sensor format with a total of 7712 × 5360 pixels. Maximum image size at a 4:3 aspect ratio is 7136 × 5360 pixels (38.2 Mpx); maximum image size at a 16:9 aspect ratio is 7712 × 4352 pixels (33.6 Mpx). Pixel size is 1.12 µm. Sensor size is 8.80×6.60 mm. Crop factor 3.93×. 35 mm equivalent focal length: 25 mm for 16:9, 27 mm for 4:3. f/2.2
Compare
The Nokia 808 has a 41.3-megapixel FSI CMOS image sensor, 1/1.2-inch image sensor format with an active area of 7728 × 5368 pixels, totalling over 41 Mpx. Depending on the aspect ratio chosen by the user, it will use 7728 × 4354 pixels (33.6 Mpx) for 16:9 images, or 7152 × 5368 pixels (38.2 Mpx) for 4:3 images with the default camera app. The commercial app CameraPro[8] can use the whole sensor size for capturing full 7728 × 5368 pixels (41.48 megapixel) pictures with more than 30 megabytes each. Pixel size is 1.4 µm. Sensor size is 10.67×8.00 mm. Crop factor 3.2×. 35 mm equivalent focal length: 26 mm, 16:9 | 28 mm, 4:3. f/2.4
Lens
Carl Zeiss optics with f/2.2 focal ratio. Focal length: 7.2 mm: 35 mm equivalent focal length: 25 mm @ 16:9 aspect ratio, and 27 mm @ 4:3 aspect ratio. Construction: Six elements in one group. All lens surfaces are aspherical, partly extreme aspheric, one high refractive index, low-dispersion glass mould lens.
Optical image stabilisation — includes new type of barrel shift actuator, which enables moving a heavy and complex full-lens assembly.
Shutter
Mechanical shutter with short shutter lag.
Processing
On-chip image processor performing image scaling with oversampling, giving lossless zoom: 4× for full-HD 1080p video with on-chip video processor performing image resolution processing with over 1 billion pixels per second, enabling the use of all pixels for improved image noise and dynamic range.

Nokia Pro Camera software

The Lumia 1020 ships with Nokia's new Pro Camera application, allowing a greater degree of control over the camera settings than the standard Windows Phone in-built camera and can be set as the default imaging application when launched with the camera button. Providing "swipe-able" dials in a concentric ring display, settings such as exposure level, white balance, shutter speed and film ISO can be adjusted "on the fly" to enable changes to be visualised before a shot is taken. Nokia hope to bring professional camera settings, once the preserve of experts, to the masses and encourage experimentation and learning using built-in tutorials.

Model variants

Model RM-875 RM-876 RM-877
Countries International TBA United States
Carriers/​Providers International TBA AT&T
2G Quad-band GSM/EDGE (850/900/1800/1900 MHz)
3G Quad-band HSPA+ 1, 2, 5/6, 8
(850​/900​/1900​/2100 MHz)
Pentaband HSPA+ 1, 2, 4, 5/6, 8
(850​/900​/AWS​/1900​​/2100 MHz)
Quad-band HSPA+ 1, 2, 5/6, 8
(850​/900​/1900​/2100 MHz)
4G Pentaband LTE 1, 3, 7, 8, 20
(2100​/1800​/2600​/900​/800 MHz)
No Quad-band LTE 2, 4, 5, 17
(700​/850​/1700​/1900 MHz)
Max network speed down/​upload LTE: 100/50 Mbit/s
DC-HSPA+: 42.2/5.76 Mbit/s
HSPA+: 21/5.76 Mbit/s LTE: 100/50 Mbit/s
DC-HSPA+: 42.2/5.76 Mbit/s

Reception

Reception was mainly positive, but some reviewers noted that the market for the Lumia 1020 is limited.
Kamalahasan from KnowYourGadget stated: "Nokia Lumia 1020 is a great improvement over the Nokia 808. The camera is just superb and one of the best we have seen on a mobile device. If you need a simple smartphone and your phone doubles as your point and shoot, this is the device for you.[9]
Brian Klug from Anandtech stated: "I think it’s fair to say that once again Nokia has basically set the bar for the rest of the smartphone imaging world – in terms of both hardware and software features."[10]
Chris Finnamore from Expert Reviews wrote: "Simply stunning photos make the Lumia 1020 the ultimate cameraphone."[11] He gave it five stars and awarded it the Expert Reviews: Ultimate award, which places it among other high-end flagships such as the Galaxy S4 and the iPhone 5S, which also received the award.[12][13]
Erin Lodi of Digital Photography Review wrote: "Despite the lower lighting level, the Nokia is able to out-perform its rivals by a healthy margin. Fine detail is better maintained and the image is generally "cleaner." This benefit (that comes from a combination of a larger sensor and the noise-reducing effect of downscaling images), is one of the significant advantages of Nokia's decision to use a large sensor in a smartphone. Whether you look at the resolution stripe on the left of the image or the etched portrait on the right, the 1020 is significantly out-performing its rivals."[14]
David Pierce from The Verge said that this is a remarkable phone, hampered by its operating system.[15]
Dan Nosowitz from Popular Science wrote: "Nokia's new Lumia smartphone has amazing hardware (especially its unprecedented 41-megapixel camera). And it doesn't matter at all, because its software lags so far behind its hardware."[16]
Charles Arthur from The Guardian wrote: "The Finnish phone maker released its remarkable Lumia 1020 phone with a 41-megapixel camera - but it's still missing native apps for low-quality Instagram, Vine and Snapchat"[17]
Jim Fisher and Sascha Segan from PC Magazine wrote: "The Lumia 1020 is a big step forward for camera phones, but the step isn't complete. Nokia's sensor and lens advances must be paired with a CPU and image processor fast enough to make shooting effortless, and Windows Phone's creative app gaps need to be filled in."[18]
G van Veldhoven from Gadgetmania wrote: "If you absolutely need the best camera on a smartphone and don’t mind Windows Phone 8 and spending a good chunk of money upfront, the Lumia 1020 is worth looking at, but I don’t expect it to be very popular."[19]
Sales are slower than the Lumia 920 and the previous Lumia 900;[20] they are similar to the Lumia 928.[21]

Reported problems

Some Lumia 1020 users have reported instances of rapid battery drain and overheating, random reboots or freezes, poor voice call quality or Wi-Fi drop outs.[22]

joe

Developer

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