When it comes to the camera department, OnePlus is overshadowed by OEMs like Google and Huawei. While these companies extensively rely on hardware based computational photography to enhance the final output, OnePlus is having their faith on traditional software oriented post processing methods.

huawei_p30_pro_moon_photo_weibo
Capturing the moon using Huawei P30 Pro

While OnePlus 7 Pro, the latest flagship from the Chinese OEM, does hold a pretty high position in the DxOMark ranking, regular users failed to replicate the said level of performance on their units.

OnePlus did release an array of software updates – a couple of them were specifically intended for camera optimizations – to make it right. Problem is, they still don’t want to infuse the power of so-called ‘artificial intelligence’ like other companies.

oneplus_7_pro_dxomark_score

Our readers should remember the incident, when OnePlus imaging director Simon Liu was interviewed by Wired weeks before the official release of OnePlus 7 Pro. He emphasized on the pixel-binning capabilities of the Sony IMX586 sensor and the wide angle lens, but was reluctant when asked about introducing AI.

The OnePlus 7’s main camera, in contrast, uses downsampling or pixel binning to create 12-megapixel images and in the software version we used, there was no option to create photos at “full” resolution.

We slightly change the tuning but OnePlus users shouldn’t expect too much difference on the surface. If you’re trying to shoot a plant and the camera tells you it’s a dog, that’s not useful.

Although we don’t want to dive into the controversy about “AI versus a bunch of if-else clauses”, a recent interview of Zack Zhang, OnePlus Product manager, explores the shortcomings of camera processing by the company.

Conducted by The Next Web (TNW), Zhang did mention their plan to give more focus on computational photography as one of the key measures to stay strong in the current competition.

Even by our own standards, the camera is not where we want it to be. We’re trying to improve our image quality to match the best in the market.

(Source)

Call it a coincidence, but we are able to spot an interesting development inside the stock OnePlus Camera app. Thanks to the findings of XDA forum member Bartixxx, we are now pretty much confident that the Shenzhen based OEM is actively working on integrating AI related features in their camera.

oneplus_camera_snapdrahon_npu_string
Click/Tap to zoom

Noticed anything out of the place? The snippet is part of a difference between the strings found after decompiling different version of OnePlus Camera apps. To be specific, the 3.8.x branch comes with a reference of ‘Snapdragon Neural Processing Engine’ (look at line 439)!

FYI, Qualcomm publicly provides documentations for devs to unleash the true potential of their custom Kryo CPU cores, Adreno GPU and Hexagon DSPs. Using the aforementioned API, third party applications can use the AI functionalities of these components in a streamlined manner.

Premium tier Qualcomm® Snapdragon™ mobile platforms have extensive heterogeneous computing capabilities that are engineered to allow the running of trained neural networks on device without a need for connection to the cloud. The Qualcomm® Neural Processing SDK for artificial intelligence (AI) is designed to help developers run one or more neural network models trained in Caffe/Caffe2, ONNX, or TensorFlow on Snapdragon mobile platforms, whether that is the CPU, GPU or DSP.

The 3.8.x branch of OnePlus Camera is only available in the recently published Android Q Developer Preview 4, although it is possible to sideload the APK on older models.

We still don’t know how the company is planning to utilize the AI modules to strengthen their camera processing, but guess it should be publicly available with the stable release of Android Q.

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Kingshuk De
896 Posts

I came from a mixed background of Statistics and Computer Science. My research domains included embedded computer systems, mobile computing and delay tolerant networks in post-disaster scenarios. Apart from tinkering with gadgets or building hackintosh, I like to hop on various subreddits and forums like MyDigitalLife and XDA.

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