- For a few years now,
I've been saying this thing.
If the most important part
of a new phone for you
is the camera, maybe instead
of buying a new phone
you should think about
buying a new camera.
I've been thinking a lot about that advice
since I started testing
these two Sony products.
This is the Sony Xperia 1 II smart phone,
and this is the Sony ZV-1 vlogging camera.
And both of these are excellent devices
if you're looking for a
really specific thing.
But if you're just looking
for the best smartphone
or the best pocketable camera,
I don't think either one of these
would be my first pick.
But they are worth talking about
because they come from a
different world than we're used to
and it's one that can teach us something.
You know what it's like to
live in Apples iPhone world
or Google's Pixel world,
or even Samsung's Galaxy...
World? Galaxy world?
Sure.
But there's a Sony world too,
and living in it for a while
has clarified how I think about cameras.
So, here's a question.
What can we learn from Sony world?
(relaxed electronic music)
So, I just have to tell
you that this video
has been super hard for me to make.
This is probably my third attempt
at doing something with
one of these devices
and I think it's because my brain
is just chock-full of little details
and observations and opinions, so,
instead what I decided to do is
we're gonna have a full review
of each of these devices
up on theverge.com, but it's way too much
for a single video, or even a couple,
and so instead, I wanna
talk about Sony world,
or more specifically, Sony camera world.
See, Sony is a monster
in mirrorless cameras,
they're really good at
shooting far-cam video,
and some of them are great all-rounders.
So, I'm using a Sony a7 III right now,
before that I was using an RX100,
there's a whole ecosystem around them and,
Sony cameras also have quirks,
like impenetrable menus
and unique color science,
but generally they're
really well regarded.
And so, the Sony Xperia 1 II
is Sony's attempt to take a smart phone
and put it inside that camera world.
You might know that Sony already
makes great camera sensors,
your phone right now might even use one,
but historically, Sony's phone cameras
have been kinda, meh.
So the Xperia 1 II's big idea
is to make Sony's phones work
a little bit more like Sony's cameras.
Okay, so I actually should tell you
a little bit more about
each of these devices
and I'm gonna do it really fast.
Normally these would be the whole review,
but I've got other
things to talk about so,
buckle up.
(he sighs) Here we go.
Sony Xperia 1 II is the sequel
to the Sony Xperia 1, duh.
It is Sony's attempt at making
a super flagship 5G phone
and it costs 1,200 bucks in the U.S.,
where it doesn't support
5G for bad reasons.
Whatever.
Sony likes making these super tall
21 by 9 aspect ratio screens,
and I actually kinda dig it,
even though this phone is a
little bit too big for me.
I think the overall
aesthetics are really clean
and really nice.
Sony also checks a lot
of rare feature boxes,
this is a 4K OLED screen,
there's a fingerprint sensor
on the power button, there's a real,
honest-to-God shutter button,
there's a headphone jack,
there's Micro SD card slot expansion,
there's dual front facing speakers.
It runs Android pretty well,
it's a relatively clean install,
Sony's cleaned some stuff up,
but the whole point of this phone
is the camera system.
And there, Sony is focusing, aha,
on a familiar Sony camera interface,
but most of all, a 1 over
1.7 inch 12 megapixel sensor
which is pretty big for a phone.
This thing can focus 60 times per second,
it can shoot 20 full
resolution images per second,
it can focus on your eye,
or it can focus on your pet's eye.
(he sighs)
Yeah.
Okay, now, the Sony ZV-1 vlogging camera.
It is basically an RX100 with the optics,
the zoom, and ND filter of the mark 5,
but with the faster focusing,
updated one inch sensor
and video processing capabilities
of the mark 7.
However, Sony finally made the right kind
of flip-out screen that
you want for vlogging,
but they replaced the
magnesium body with plastic,
they got rid of the electronic viewfinder,
they got rid of the focus ring,
and they got rid of the flash
and in replacement of those,
you get a better three
mic array microphone.
You get a tally light
which shows it's recording,
and you get a hot shoe.
Plus there's a couple
of neat pre-set options,
it has a background de-focus button
that automatically sets the aperture
to its most open to blur your background,
and it has a product focus button
that turns off face priority
so it can focus on the product
you're showing the camera
and not just lock onto your face.
Oh, and it's only 800
bucks, which is 400 bucks
less than the RX100 mark 7.
Oh, and you get a free dead cat!
That's what they call the thing
that keeps the wind from
hitting your microphone,
it's called a dead cat, I don't know.
Camera people get to have jokes too, okay?
That might be the fastest
I've done any spec run down
of a gadget, much less two in a row,
but I think we did it.
And, if you live in Android world,
you maybe heard this Xperia description
and you thought to yourself,
ah, that's interesting, tell
me more about the camera
but I don't know if
it's worth 1,200 bucks.
Probably not, and you're right.
But, maybe the second
explanation of this camera
was gibberish to you.
But if you live in Sony camera world,
you heard that explanation
and you now know exactly what the ZV-1 is,
what it can do, and whether or not
it'll work for your needs,
you might know that, yeah, you
need interchangeable lenses,
or maybe you just wanna have a B cam,
or you just want something
that's this powerful,
that can do this much,
that fits in your pocket.
Or maybe it was all gibberish,
I mean, that's totally fair.
If I hadn't spent the last 10 years
learning how Android phones work,
or the last three months
on a goddamn crash course
in Sony camera so I could shoot video
during a lockdown, it might've
been gibberish to me too.
The point here isn't necessarily
all the individual details of the specs,
what I wanna talk about in this video is,
what they mean for how you
actually end up using these cameras.
Okay, so I'm gonna do this,
I'll turn on the background de-focus.
Ooh.
Okay, how is the Sony
ZV-1 as a vlogging camera?
I actually think it's kinda stupendous.
I admit this is a parts bin camera,
it's basically an RX100 with
a bunch of customizations
made for vlogging, but I love the RX100.
But there are some limitations
here to know about, so,
the widest that this lens can get
is the equivalent of 24 millimeters,
which isn't quite wide enough
to comfortably hold the camera out
to point at your face unless you've got it
way out on your arm like I do now or,
use a selfie stick, my arm is actually
already kinda tired right now.
It also props in a little bit
if you have image stabilization on and so,
if you're gonna get this thing,
you've really gotta get a selfie stick
in order to do proper vlogging with it.
But, other than that,
in terms of simplicity
and in terms of not having a ceiling
for when you wanna learn to
do more professional stuff,
this thing is great.
I mean, look, this thing is wildly capable
as a camera.
It has basically all of the same features
and options as my a7 III there,
but it's in a $800 package
that fits in my pocket.
And I also love this
product showcase feature
which basically turns
on a bunch of settings
that are already available
on other Sony cameras,
but it simplifies it to one button,
so it turns off face priority,
so if I put something
in front of the camera,
it'll focus on the closer
thing to the camera
instead of to my face,
and then it'll focus on my face again,
and then on this thing,
and it does it really fast.
Now, I do have to use this camera
a little bit differently
that I would use an a7 III,
or even how I'd use a
phone to do vlogging,
and I want you to hold that thought
about using cameras differently
because it's super important.
But right now, let's get back
to this Xperia 1 II.
See, the Xperia has this
hot shit, big sensor
that can do eye auto-focus
and focus really fast
and shoot fast Birch photos,
but the standard camera app is kinda, meh?
The pictures it takes are okay,
but they feel a little bit lifeless.
But that's part of Sony's game here.
It knows that it can't
hang with Google or Apple
or maybe even Samsung when
it comes to image processing,
so instead it just kinda
skips that for the most part
and gives you the option
to use it more like a
traditional mirrorless camera
with the Pro Camera app and
the Cinema Pro video app.
The interface with the Pro Camera app
even looks a lot like Sony's
big camera interface, see?
Now also, I've got some
photos, here's an example.
You can see that there's motion
blur in this night photo.
So what I did is I set the the ISO
so that the shutter speed was slow enough
so that I could get the motion blur
while still capturing
the rest of the scene
just like I wanted, like you
might on a DSLR or whatever.
Your standard night modes
on a Pixel or an iPhone,
they just won't do that.
And Sony even sort of tries
to make it feel like a real camera,
you've got a real shutter button here
and you can choose between the lenses
by looking at their
millimeter equivalents.
Now look, I know you can
probably get similar results
using a manual camera app and
one of those other phones,
but the other thing that Sony does here
is less post-processing,
because it's trying to
maximize capture speed.
So, again, you can shoot a
20 frames per second burst
and it wants to get
that saved to your disk
as quickly as possible so you
can just get that action shot.
So when I was trying to figure out
what I wanted to say about these cameras,
Vjeran, who's editing this
video and shooting the B roll,
actually, say hi, Vjeran.
- Hi.
- Vjeran said something that struck me
as both obvious and
actually kind of profound.
Here, just tell them, Vjeran.
- Your overall approach to photography
changes depending on which camera you use.
- Which,
duh.
Different cameras can do different things
and so you adjust your shooting style
to those cameras' capabilities.
But also,
whoa, you're gonna be
making different art.
The things you make are
going to be different
based on the tool or, you know,
based on the instrument,
that you're using.
I've actually got a whole video
about that tool versus instrument thing,
We'll link it down in the doobly-doos.
So, for example, this shot
that I'm using right now
with the a7 III to shoot this video,
it looks fine, but I
think it looks pretty bad
when I try and replicate it
with something like the ZV-1.
However, can't hold the
a7 III out like this
for very long 'cause it's heavy.
And then on top of that, however,
I don't always have this
camera or that camera with me
and so this camera's with me all the time
and so I can make something else.
The music you make is different
depending on what instruments you use.
Duh, but, the pictures you make
depend on what kind of
camera that you're using,
and it's not just a
spectrum from good to bad,
it's different kinds of pictures.
So, the thing about the Xperia 1 II
is the kinds of pictures that it's good at
are not the kinds of
pictures that I want to take
with a phone, I mostly shoot
my phone in full auto mode
and the full auto mode pictures
out of the Xperia 1 II are good,
but they're not $1,200 good.
And as much as I'm impressed
at how this thing can take action photos,
it's just not what I
wanna do with a phone.
Which brings us all the way back
to the advice from the
beginning of this video.
If all you want out of a
new phone is better photos,
you should maybe think
about spending your money
on a standalone camera instead
of getting a new phone.
And, after living in Sony's camera world
for a while, I still
think that's good advice
but a little bit differently now.
What I think you should be doing
is spending more of your time
thinking about what kind
of photos and videos
you want to make first.
And then see what kind of
gadget will help you make them.
Hey, everybody, thank
you so much for watching,
I'm sorry I didn't get
into all the details
like for example, this screen doesn't work
with polarized sunglasses,
which is real dumb.
And this screen, they say it's like
90 hertz equivalent refresh rate,
but it's actually 60 and
they do motion swiveling,
which is weird but fine.
Anyway, we'll talk a little
bit more about that stuff
down in the comments,
but I'm also, of course,
gonna have full reviews,
again, at theverge.com.
