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I've been thinking about the same thing since Google impressed everyone with their computational photography tech years ago. The software in DSLRs is really primitive in comparison.

2014: https://ai.googleblog.com/2014/10/hdr-low-light-and-high-dyn...

2017: https://ai.googleblog.com/2017/04/experimental-nighttime-pho...

Really makes you wonder what could be achieved by combining Google's computational photography algorithms with a bigger sensor and high quality optics. I'm probably not going to buy another high end camera, until I see something like that on the market.



Indeed, a traditional camera with the post-processing of a smartphone would be incredible.

But indeed, camera manufacturers are way way way behind. The best they can do at the moment is find faces on a picture (and still, not that well except on Sony cameras). This is disappointing to say the least.

The Zeiss ZX1 runs Android, but I don't know how much computational photography it provides, since all the reviews about it only emphasize the fact that it can run Lightroom (which sounds completely useless).


there is e.g. https://magiclantern.fm/about.html for Canon DSLRs that allows you to do some more interesting things, it's been around for a decade or more




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