DxO One
WHAT IS THE DXO?
The DxO One is a small camera that plugs into an iPhone to radically improve the quality of photos you can take while on the go.
It has a lens and sensor, similar to what you might find in an advanced compact camera like the Sony RX100 IV, but borrows your phone’s screen so the camera itself can stay absolutely tiny. It’s a lot like the Sony QX100, but smaller and a bit more convenient.
However, we don’t think we’re ready to trade in our high-end compacts just yet. And at £449 there’s no huge price benefit either. Is it a failure? Anything but. Whether most people should consider buying one is another question, though.
DXO – DESIGN AND HANDLING
The DxO One is a small, palm-size camera that can be thought of as an iPhone accessory. Even if it may cost more than what you spent on your phone. Own an Android? You’re out of luck; it only works with iOS devices.
It features its own sensor, lens, storage and processor, but plugs into the Lightning port on your iPhone. This lets the phone act as the preview screen, and gives you a way to fiddle with manual settings like aperture and shutter speed. While the DxO One has its own shutter button, it doesn’t have any control rings or dials.
It’s also not really designed to stay on your phone all the time. The arrangement is more handycam-like, with the DxO One sitting sideways on the bottom of the phone. The One will almost certainly fit in your pocket, but not while it’s attached to your phone..
Your results will vary, but it is kinda fun to shoot like this. The design also nods towards this sort of use. You flick the lens cover down to turn the DxO One on, but it’s actually a two-stage mechanism. You need to push the cover down even further to make the Lightning adapter pop out. The design is smart.
However, the DxO One also won’t play nice with every single iPhone case. It needs a bit of clearance around the Lightning port, which most cases just don’t give you. This is not ‘just’ a dodgy design decision. By sitting flush with the iPhone body it means not too much strain is put on the connector itself when you’re handling the DxO. Doing so would be bad news, and even as it is you’ll feel a bit odd holding something that appears to only be connected by a tiny little Lightning jack.
After weeks of use, it still makes me feel nervous at times. But it hasn't died yet.
The DxO One takes a little while to get used to. There are some benefits to non-wireless style, though. Using a wired connection makes the transmission between DxO One and phone fast and flawless (in my experience, anyway), and means there’s almost zero lag between moving the camera and seeing the app’s preview image update.
If you’ve not used something like this, you’ll take it for granted, but the connection in the old Sony QX100 was nowhere near as solid. This must have been a much-debated point in the early days of the DxO’s design, given just about everything else in tech that hasn’t made the leap to wireless seems to be thinking about doing so.
Using the DxO One app gives you a reasonable simulation of the sort experience you get with a ‘proper’ camera. There are the usual PASM modes, giving you control over things like aperture and shutter speed. It’s these that give you creative control over your photography, not Instagram-style filters.
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