Samsung. Due to the lack of ideas, and the desire to have screens with the thinnest edges, the Korean company is going to launch its first smartphone with a rotating camera, after launching phones with a quad camera in 2018. For this new smartphone with a rotating camera of 48 megapixels, those from Samsung do not intend to offer very good specifications, but intend to implement the innovation in a mid-range phone, with which they will also test the market in this regard idea.
Samsung. The rotating camera will be hidden inside the case, as happens with some smartphone models, and will only be removed when users want to take pictures, be it selfies or normal pictures . It is not known what kind of camera will be integrated by Samsung in the phone that will apparently have the name GALAXY A90, but it is possible that it will be a dual one, to allow the recording of good photos.
Samsung. The FIRST Smartphone with a ROTATING Camera
Samsung. The idea of offering a rotating camera for normal photos, or selfies, is not such a bad idea, and this is because users can get very good photos even when they hold the phone with the screen facing them. It is well known that phones have worse front cameras than the main ones, and Samsung's solution is one that could please many users who will choose their future phone models.
But rather than implementing this setup, the Galaxy A90 will reportedly include only rear-facing sensors. The reason being that, according to the source, the pop-out module can also rotate, thus allowing the rear-facing cameras to be used for selfies.
Samsung. The first phones with a quad camera were from the GALAXY A series, so it is normal to see a rotating camera implemented in a phone from the same series, before this component reaches the more expensive models. Based on the information that has appeared so far, it seems that this new Samsung phone will be launched very soon, it was even listed on the Korean website recently, so we don't have much to wait for it.
Samsung. The Korean company promised that it would include technological innovations first in the cheaper products, and only then in the more expensive ones, and here they are keeping their word.