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The $1,800 Sony Xperia Pro-I phone shares feature with RX100 VII compact camera

The $1,800 Sony Xperia Pro-I phone shares feature with RX100 VII compact camera

The Sony Xperia Pro-I isn’t the first phone to have a 1-inch camera sensor. But it’s the first to put the 1-inch sensor from the popular Sony RX100 VII camera into a phone. Lucky for us, Sony didn’t stop there and added a mechanical dual aperture, a new 50-millimeter lens, EyeAF support to video and a new app called Video Pro. The price for all of this is $1,800, which converts roughly to £1,300 or AU$2,400. 

If you are obsessed with finding the best cameras on a phone, the past month has been a generous one. Apple released the iPhone 13 and 13 Pro. Google launched Pixel 6 and 6 Pro. And now there is the Sony Xperia Pro-I. The I stands for imaging. At least, that’s what Sony told me. 

For years, many of us have hoped for a phone with a truly amazing camera built around a large image sensor. In 2018, cinema camera maker Red got our hopes up with the Hydrogen One phone which ended up having a mid-tier Android camera system that could shoot 3D photos and videos.  

Now don’t get me wrong, what Apple, Google, Huawei and Samsung have been able to do with tiny image sensors and computational photography is absolutely amazing. But you have to wonder: What if the iPhone, instead of having an image sensor that was 0.6 inches, had one that was 1 inch? And that’s where Sony enters the conversation with the Xperia Pro-I. It’s basically a Sony Xperia 1 III phone with the sensor from a Sony RX100 VII camera. 

What’s amazing is that Sony was able to fit a 1-inch sensor into a phone body that is roughly the same thickness as an iPhone 13 Pro Max. A larger sensor means a wider dynamic range and improved low-light performance for both photos and videos. But it turns out, that 1-inch image sensor might not be fully used. The camera review website DPReview points out that just 60% of the Xperia Pro-I’s 1-inch sensor is used for photos and videos. That means instead of taking 20-megapixel photos like the Sony RX100 VII, the Xperia Pro-I takes 12-megapixel photos. That’s not necessarily a deal-breaker, but it’s a definite bummer. 

Sony sent me a pre-production sample of the Xperia Pro-I to try. Photos and videos look good. Check out the hands-on video attached to this article to see video clips I shot using the Xperia Pro-I. I still have more testing and will do a full in-depth review once I can get a final production sample. All photos and videos I shot were taken with the main camera and its 24mm lens or the ultrawide camera with its 16mm lens. The 50mm camera was disabled on the preproduction prototype. 

Sony is not the only company to put a 1-inch sensor into a phone. But the sensor in the Xperia Pro-I has been through seven generations of improvements and updates and combines the finesse of Sony’s other phone photographic tools and apps. 

Like the Xperia 1 III, the Xperia Pro-I has Sony’s Photo Pro and Cinema Pro apps. But, Sony wanted a better video option for those looking for something more advanced than basic video recording and something not as complicated as using the Cinema Pro app. With the Xperia Pro-I, Sony is launching a new app called Video Pro which is aimed at journalists, vloggers and the like. 

The Xperia Pro-I works with the $99 Sony VCT-SGR1 shooting grip. That’s important because along with the Xperia Pro-I, Sony announced a $199 vlogging monitor kit which comes with a phone mount, a magnetic monitor and a tiny cable to connect the monitor and phone. The kit makes it so that you can film yourself with the main rear camera and that 1-inch sensor. 

The Xperia Pro-I has the same 4K 120Hz display, USB-C port and dedicated headphone jack as the Xperia 1 III. The Xperia Pro-I runs on the Qualcomm Snapdragon 888 5G processor and supports low and mid-band 5G. Sony still plans to sell the Xperia Pro that came out earlier this year. The differentiator is it has a micro-HDMI port, 5G support for both sub-6 and mmWave here in the US. 

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by The Technology Express staff and is published from a syndicated feed)

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