Hands on with the LG Renoir
Our colleagues over in the U.K. have reviewed the LG Renoir already, but since it's a Europe-only phone, we weren't able to handle the device on our own. If you recall, the LG Renoir is an 8-megapixel camera phone with plenty of high-end photo features like face detection, blink detection, manual focus, an ISO sensitivity of up to 1,600, and more. At CES 2009, LG had it out on display for everyone to try, and I finally had a chance to see the Renoir in person.

LG Renoir
(Credit: Nicole Lee/CNET)The LG Renoir looks and feels like most other LG touch-screen phones. The home screen has the four icons along the bottom, while the menu interface has the navigation icons along the right side. This interface is similar to the one on the LG Incite and the LG Glimmer. It's a really good-looking phone, with an intuitive touch interface that has vibrating haptic feedback.
But of course, what I really wanted to see was the camera. The camera features something called Touch Shot, which lets you tap something on the screen to auto focus on an object, and then when you lift your finger, a photo is automatically taken. As you can see in the video here, we also had a chance to see how the face detection and blink detection worked. If it notices a blink, the phone warns you that someone blinked, and you can then take the photo again. With the face detection, once there's a green square around someone's face, the screen will actually follow the person's face whenever he or she moves around. The video doesn't quite capture the coolness of it, but it's a taste of how the camera works.

LG Renoir's home screen
(Credit: Nicole Lee/CNET)Though we didn't get a look at them, other camera features include a Beauty Shot, which removes imperfections and blemishes from the skin, and Art Shot, which adds photo effects like different color tones.
Other Renoir features include Wi-Fi, A-GPS, a camcorder that can take 120 frames per second (fps) of high speed video and turn it into a 5 fps time-lapse recording, support for XVid and DivX video codecs, and more. It's currently available in Asia and Europe only.
Nicole Lee is an associate editor for CNET, covering cell phones, Bluetooth headsets, and all things mobile. She's also pretty geeky--she likes World of Warcraft, comic books, and shiny gadgets. E-mail Nicole.


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by shmty25
January 9, 2009 1:03 PM PST
- I was very excited about this camera phone until I saw this review.
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by urr_quasdim
January 9, 2009 2:27 PM PST
- Sure is. But here is another disappointment: The browser is a dud: zooming to a certain area of the page is a hit-or-miss exercise - mainly miss, because the zooming also involves automatic and involuntary panning! Oh boy, by the time you manage to catch what you wanted to see, you're ready to throw the phone against the wall! Even those who don't have the iPhone browsing experience will be disgusted by this one. The Renoir is more a toy than a usable phone - and some even label it a "Smartphone" even though there is no operating system in it.
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(4 Comments)http://www.phonearena.com/htmls/GSM-Cameraphone-Comparison-Q4-2008-review-r_2039.html
Despite its great specs, I am appalled at how horrible this camera actually is. After all, isn't that supposed to be one of the major selling factors of this phone?
I returned mine after a few disappointing days.