Why the Panasonic Lumix DMC-CM1 is a bad idea

Panasonic Lumix DMC-CM1
When camera and smartphone collide, it's not always pretty

Panasonic announced a beast of a smartphone camera at Photokina 2014, and the little gadget has already garnered quite a bit of interest. For photo enthusiasts, having a 1-inch sensor with a Leica lens in a smartphone sounds like a dream.

It also helps that the Panasonic Lumix DMC-CM1 has a 4.7-inch 1080p display and all the GHz and RAM and mAh that a modern Android flagship has. So there's no question that, on paper, this is quite a good Android device.

Buy a camera or a phone, not a cameraphone

When considering a new smartphone, I always tell people to consider battery life, or at least spare battery packs and cases. The weakest and slowest moving technology in any smartphone is battery life. We have processors fast as computers from a few years ago, displays so sharp that they'll cut your eyeballs, and yet we're still using the same lithium ion batteries that have been in smartphones for years.

If we consider the Lumix DMC-CM1 and its 2,600mAh battery, that's nothing. It's good enough to get an Android phone through the day, maybe, but coupled with the monster of a camera in it and you're done.

Buying this phone really means you're buying a camera that happens to be a phone, too. Otherwise, if you're really on the market for a solid Android device, you're better off with LG, HTC, Motorola or Samsung.

Then again, if you want to buy a good camera, buy a camera! There are so many good compact and CSC cameras out there now that I can't recommend something like the Lumix DMC-CM1 in good faith. Let history be a lesson: those Samsung Galaxy cameras that ran Android were hardly a runaway hit.

Quality hardly matters unless you're printing

The idea that you can take a photo with a proper camera with a nicely sized sensor behind some nice glass, then share it instantly with your Facebook or Instagram friends is great. Why shoot with the HTC One's 4MP UltraPixel camera for Instagram when you can have a 1-inch, 20MP sensor and Leica glass?

I'll tell you why: it doesn't matter. When you're looking at your Facebook or Instagram stream on your tiny little smartphone, you won't be able to appreciate the massive detail that these cameras can capture. How many megapixels do you need to produce a photo that's going to be viewed at 1.5 inches square?

Additionally, having the convenience of a nice camera running on Android doesn't really make sense anymore. More and more compact, CSC and DSLR cameras are coming equipped with Wi-Fi. That means you can control these cameras with your smartphone, and you can also edit and share your photos immediately through your iPhone or Android device.