So the cameras on the 20/20 iPad Pro, actually Pro. The short answer is no. The long answer is that Apple's definition of Pro is different between the iPhones and the iPads. Now I realize that maybe Apple lumped in the lie to our portion with their claim of being a pro camera system, but they don't really talk about LIDAR when it comes to the pro camera system. On the website. Now, as a side note, one of the things I realized because we did not get a release keynote because of this coronavirus thing everyone's in isolation.
This iPad Pro has a 12, Z or Z chip, which is an older chip. From my perspective, because the new iPhone 11s having a 13 chip, the 2018 iPad Pro had a 12x chip, and so everything seems a little outdated from that respect and outdated. It's also a good word to describe how you use the camera on the new iPad pros. There's a lot of camera quality of life stuff that you can find on iOS that hasn't made the iPadOS, which is weird and troubling at the same time, yeah I'm Oh. By reviews, a mighty nigh base all our videos on actually usage.
So when it's a camera comparison video, we compare cameras now before I went and shot a bunch of stuff. I actually really wanted to see on paper. What was kind of different difference between the old and new versions and the iPhone versions of the iPad versions. Again, we didn't get a release keynote, so you know I usually pick notes, and I'm like oh Phil is saying that this is the best camera that we've ever put in an iPad, and I'll, make note of it and- and you know think about that it features, but we didn't get that, so I had to go figure that out manually now when I was planning on doing this, video I was gonna. Compare the pro camera systems on the iPhone 11 pros, I, guess the iPad Pro, because they're both probe products, but in reality the cameras on the iPad Pro 20/20 version are actually the same, almost as good as the ones for the iPhone 11, which is not a pro camera system.
The actual lens is on the iPad are smaller than the ones on the iPhone Elevens. My guess is that the lenses are smaller, because you don't have for I, yes, but the old iPad lenses were much bigger and didn't have. Oh, is either so I have no idea. So here are the noticeable differences on the spec sheets found on Apple's website. The iPad pros ultra-wide is only 10 megapixels inside with the 12 on the iPhone 11, but it has a five-degree, bigger field of view technically, but I want to show you some photos where I think that's not the case.
There's no portrait mode on the rear-facing camera on the iPad pros, as I mentioned before. There's no oh, is on the cameras and the iPhone 11 has a sixth element wide angled lens, whereas in the iPads is only five and for all you night, owls out there's no night mode on the iPad. So that's for still photography. When it comes to recording video. There aren't as many differences.
There are actually more audio recording features on the iPhone 11, like audio zoom and stereo recording, which is stuff that I haven't really noticed on the new iPhone 11s. The iPad has noise reduction, whereas the iPhone ? doesn't apparently according to Apple's website, and there's no cinematic video stabilization for shooting 4k on the iPad, which actually I think this product needs more because this is just a really awkward way to shoot. Video, it's very big. It's like taking a magazine and just running over now on to the true depth camera, which is the front camera. The scanned your face and everything the iPhone 11s have a 12 megapixel front-facing camera and the iPads only have a 7 and the only other difference for that is that you don't get any slow.
So those are the biggest differences is on paper between the iPhone 11 and the brand-new 20/20 hi-pro. But what's the difference between the 2018 iPad Pro and the 20/20 iPad Pro? Basically, nothing. You basically get an extra lens and a bunch of ugly bumps behind your iPad. The only other thing that you may notice is that you get a better flash on the new iPads, so at the end of the day, again pro means extra camera lens and that extra camera lens it's the wide-angle lens. So it's kind of a fringe feature, I kind of rag on it a little.
It is useful and cool, but out of like 100 photos, I'll, maybe used two or three photos using that sense I'll take two or three photos using that lens, so it's not a deal-breaker for most people, I. Think if you find yourself in a spot where you need to use the wide-angle lens, but can't just you know, take a step back unless it's on a cliff, then don't please use common sense. Now when it comes to using the camera on the iPads again you're still using it like. You are in iOS 11 and 12 you're, basically swiping to one side which doesn't always work well, which is annoying. That's how you get the camera wears on the iPhone 11s or newer iPhones.
You just push the button down here. It's like this is very nice, as you can saw. If you just saw this is kind of annoying and then the other quality-of-life thing is when you're trying to switch between HD and 4k. You can easily do that on the iPhone by tapping on the video quality at the top of the screen or in one of the corners, you still have to go through the camera settings. I mean high path to do that.
Quick. So for this comparison, I really focus on three things, which is the image stabilization, because I'm a YouTuber I shoot a lot of video, the wide-angle stuff, because as much as I rag on it, I do like it and then the last one is low-light photography, because my office isn't that well, let's yet so to show you. The image stabilization here is a virtual tour of my office. I basically walked around with an iPhone attached to my iPad and, as you can tell it is way you can see my footsteps in the iPad Pro footage, whereas in the iPhone 11 stuff it's a lot smoother for the low-light stuff for the videos, anyways I think the iPhone 11 performs a little better than the iPad pros. We skip ahead and pass the steps you can definitely again tell like the iPhone.11 footage is almost like floating its kind of like on a gimbals, almost where's, the iPad Pro. You can kind of feel can kind of see me doing this with the entire camera setup for the quality.
If we scroll to the very end- and we look at the last frame in the comparison- is that Monty is way blurrier and the iPad Pro footage, then in the iPhone, 11, footage, and so I think part of that has to do with the OS, because the cameras doing a lot more of this on the iPad Pro, whereas in the iPhone 11, it's being stabilized in the camera housing a little. So the image is a little clearer on the iPhone 11. Now next up is the wide-angle stuff, and so I try to take the same picture using the different devices. I think for this one I've lined up the corner of this, like frame that I use for my photo booth, and this is the field of view for the just standard cameras, and this is the field of view using the Y camera. Now non-paper says that the field of view on the iPad Pro is supposed to 5 degrees wider, but between these two photographs, I really think the iPhone 11 once captures a bit more.
You can kind of see a bit more. A few more stickies on each side of the photograph. I see a bit more of the ceiling as well as the floor. So unless my understanding of field of view is completely wrong, I think the iPhone 11 ones have a bigger field of view when it comes to the wide-angle lens. Here is another example: the low-light stuff I actually think Oh before I get to the low-light stuff.
You see way more of my crotch in the iPhone 11, and then you do on the iPad Pro and with the quality. If we look at my Roomba on this is the iPad Pro stuff. If you kind of look at the Roomba, this is pretty smooth. But if we go over to the iPad, it seems a little rougher. So when it comes to still images, I think the propose does a little better.
If there's no flash or if there's no night balloon or anything. This is here being another one. This is parcel lit, and you can kind of tell there's not a big difference. I, don't think. If we zoom in you may see a bit.
This is the iPad Pro footage doesn't look too bad iPhone, 11, footage or photograph, not great a little grainy err, whereas on the iPad, peeler I think seems a little smoother. We go out. The next low-light photo that we took from this distance can't really tell, but if we zoom in on the iPhone 11 one, you can definitely tell that the ceiling there's a lot more of these little chunks of pixels, whereas I'm on the iPhone eleven. It's a lot, smoother I! Think! Oh, you not! Oh, yeah! This one seems way chunkier than this one less chunky. Now this photo is with the flash.
So this isn't with night mode and overall from all the photographs that I took I, think the iPad pros sensor is a little cooler, and it's a little warmer on the iPhone 11, and this is a photograph with night mode right so on the iPhone 11s night mode like over, exposes, like you, wait three seconds, and it just basically takes the video and then creates a photo of it. It doesn't look too bad on the iPad Pro with their flash, but it does look a little more natural with the iPhone 11 version, but I took this photo, and it's like the difference between Monty with the flash in law to it that the flash that's what the flash Monty looks. Absolutely decimal: that's a new destitute, they Moscow Kent looked normally. He just looks. He got it's pretty shaggy right now, and he's going to get even shinier as and let's go on, because I'm not bringing into the ROG groomers, because you know corona isolation, coronavirus, isolation.
Now, when it comes to like normal photographs, again iPad Pro seems to take photographs that are a lot warmer. This video for the cattle stem case is coming I, think probably this weekend, so those are kind of the differences. From my perspective on the things that I care about between the camera on the iPad Pro and the camera on the iPhone 11. Now this is what necessarily better than the other on paper. Yes, but when it comes to cameras as long as you know the limitations of your camera, it doesn't really matter what you do, because you can just work around it shooting with a giant panel, and so you just kind of use what you have to do, what you need to do with the resources that you have- and this is the mouse case where the air pods so and speaking of limitations.
It's almost midnight and I filmed this dropping of the most contour. This will be my third time, and it looked like they're hideous, brutal drops, but on film mic, Pro the record buttons down here, and I've been holding it. So when I go up, I actually like press it, but I kind of don't, so it looks like I'm recording, and I lose everything after I accidentally tap it, and so you know that's a limitation. You have to work with, so you have to hold it not in the corners but along the sides, which makes it a little less will say sturdy stable. That's all I got for this video.
Hopefully you guys got some useful information out of it again. Apples pro camera system on the iPad Pro. Isn't that pro a lot of pros and that last sentence, but again it is like I, said the beginning, the video it might be because they don't really integrate the AR portion. The lighter portion into just regular photography, the AR portion, is going to be the stuff that I'm going to be testing next I'm curious to see how much better it is compared to you know the older iPad Pro from 2018, as well as some older iPhones, so I'm going to do I want to be using the IKEA Apple Watch to see if it's any better anyways. First, I watch one hour.
Videos I do encourage you to click, subscribe, produce content a lot during this corona isolation, coronavirus, isolation season and that's kind of all. I got thanks for watching for the eye for the eye for the eye. I totally like looking at the wrong thing like I, put a tiny little monitor above the camera above Glens, just I've been staring at that the entire time. So is the so as the camera is a 20 I was here till 12:30. Last night and I've been here, its 6:50 I've been here since 6:00.
My brain is just so like sluggish I will power through it. The 2018 iPad pros had a 20. Oh my god. This is painful. Oh my god.
Coronavirus focus on me: camera there we go, I usually have a teleprompter, but the teleprompter goes in the iPads I'm talking to the iPad, so I can't really use the teleprompter for the iPads and like this is supposed to be more like off more on the fly, but it actually takes more efforts to talk about stuff. Because I have to redo stuff all the freaking time. That's gross sorry Val.
Source : MobileReviewsEh