Something worth knowing: when shooting regular HDR on pixel phones, you should always go into manual controls and reduce exposure about 1-1.5 big ticks (-5 is the lowest you can go). This will massively improve the video by reducing highlight clipping and bringing both shadows and midtones down to their realistic appearance. This improves contrast significantly. Google seems to have a similar and unfortunate philosophy when it comes to video boost even in SDR, so you might be able to improve the output by lowering exposure a bit.
Oo that's really interesting! I've always turned off HDR in video on my Pixel 7 because of how noisy it is in the shadows. I will try this for sure. Any other tips to improve video on pixel?
Thanks for the tip. I use Motion Cam Pro because the quality is just outstanding but I've been having issues with it as files are being corrupted and there's nothing I can do except just lose the footage.
@@tanvir10029 Lowering exposure will definitely help with that, since shadows will be dark as they should be, and not show noise so easily. I don't shoot a lot of video but I think that HDR mode isn't *always* worth it, even with the exposure correction. For example when filming kids indoors, you might like the color pop that HDR provides, but the video will look a bit darker than a native-SDR equivalent once you send it over a messenger like whatsapp and the HDR is lost. To clarify, it will still look brighter than SDR on your device, even after lowering exposure by 1.5 ticks for HDR. Something else I noticed, though probably niche, - I filmed a concert recently where I went back and forth between 1x and 2x zoom and experienced occasional audio inconsistencies during the videos. This is likely caused by the audio zoom feature, enabled by default. Some might like what it does overall, but the jarring transitions I experienced made it less than ideal. The idea is that it blocks out noise around you and focuses on the sound coming from where the camera is pointed, but sometimes the surroundings would get muffled too much and then pop back to audible. It wasn't terrible, but if I had a second shot at it, I would film the entire thing without this feature.
I saw a video from another person which compares normal version and boosted version and it was a drastic improvement in low light but ofc he didn't compare with other phones but it did made huge difference with and without.
I saw some of these videos and I think they compare the temp file or the 1080p preview file to the processed video and that's why there's a big difference, but if you want to compare 4K30 to 4K30 you have to record twice.
@@IDTR Yeah,that could be the reason. A bit disappointed with the amount of difference they actually showed in the ads and now it's just not worth the time at all.
I think the hardware is impressive but they need to change how they tweak things, for example tuning down the exposure at night to avoid blown out highlights in videos which is a very simple fix or take the subject isolation seriously because they can already provide a great subject isolation in Google photos but they don't care about doing the same in the camera app and so on, they are small things but they are not giving that much of a attention to them
@@IDTRcorrect , the hardware on the pixel 8 pro is very impressive , but unfortunately is the processing that Google comes up short with, I'm currently using the 8 pro and to be fair have no complaints about it , great video great content 👍👍
@@1m_megapixels i am using Pixel 8 pro from past few months. my brother is using iphone 12 pro max from past few years. iphone 12 max cpu is way faster than pixel 8 pro cpu. i still feel i should have bought iphone 15 pro or max, all processing is done locally. i don't need to video boost upload and wait for it to process. i feel, no phone can beat iphone videos. my personnel choice preference, i use iphone 12 pro max to take videos eventhough i have pixel 8 pro. i never had pixel, wanted to fell and use. but for sure, my next phone upgrade i will got with iphone. i am not a iphone person, in the past i have used oneplus, samsung and now pixel.
@@jagadeesham8535 this is what I meant by my original post. Better hardware on device trumps processing video in the cloud. Especially considering you don't know what the results will be from said online processing. I'd rather get the results right away on device.
Appreciate the video as usual! Good to see you compare with a normal 4K recording. I have different results though. I was also shooting the same video twice (but indoor), both 4K 30fps, the boosted version was so much better! Way less noise, better colors. Also, comparing to 15 pro max and S23 ultra, going from the worst to best stabilization is huge to me. On the other hand, I am also disappointed that we can only boost the main sensor.
On 85" TV at 2160 the Pixel videos always have more defined frames and overall a more pleasant scene; the iPhone always offers a scene that is too warm for me; at night on the beach we can notice greater definition on the sand and on the building with the Pixel 8 Pro; overall iPhone is not an absolute benchmark; every smartphone has advantages in recording, just like the iPhone has defects. Personal preferences are ok, but the definition is an objective parameter, and it is not correct to say that the iPhone offers the most defined image at night. 😉
All three of the phones in the comparison had times where they looked much better than the others. What I've gained from this video is that the S23 Ultra is still very competitive despite being older than the 15PM and Pixel 8 with video boost.
that Sony Ericsson K800 at the background brings so much memories!!! thank you so much for such well detailed video about Video boost for Pixel 8 Pro ❤❤
12:12 & 12:17 Pixel is doing great with shadow details. With a little bit of contrast, highlights etc tuning the P8pro would be as good as iphone if not better.
I must be looking at different footage. The iPhone quality when lighting isn't perfect, still drops the framerate to compensate and then the EIS kicks in and makes the image quality even worse. Google needs to make it so the video isn't so cropped in though. The iPhone and Samsung are considerably more zoomed out.
Based on what we're seeing wirh the temp files, it looks like this new feature is shooting in LOG with high bit rate and then uploading to Google's servers for colour correction, stabilisation and noise reduction.
I was hoping for a little more from video boost. The iPhone and Samsung are pushing those outputs into a video file that is pretty much ready for you as soon as you are done filming. Video boost looks to put the Pixel on a similar level, but removes many features and takes over an hour to process on Google servers...
hmm interesting results, other people who tested it against the iPhone said the Pixel is better. I heard that the quality is widly different if the backup method to Google Photos is Original File instead of high quality. Which one do you have enabled? But I still gotta give credit to iPhone for it doing all the processing on device and still being (in this test) better imo.
I like the way the colors pop on the Pixel. Especially the greens. The HDR will raise the shadows and highlights which can be adjusted by the sliders to your preference. Or record it without HDR. I noticed it had an exposure shift on the lights. They were good and then got brighter. Shot without exposure lock I assume.
Nice Side-by-Side. However, I don't see less-contrast issues from my Video Boost results (SDR) and they look great. Were these videos recorded with 10-bit HDR turned on or off?
I think he can be the best judge of that since he is in the environment, especially because he uses the word “natural”. I can see how he comes to that conclusion, as it looks like video boost is trying to take too much details from the shadows which is giving its darker elements, a washed out appearance.
I am still confused on how it is processed. It must be shooting in 4K and 1080 simultaneously which leads me to believe that it may be using both files to process. I believe the main GNK sensor also has "three different ISO modes" so perhaps it is shooting the 1080 in a high ISO mode and the 4k in a lower ISO. I'm surprised the video did not outright slay the Samsung and iPhone. I do believe they should have also marketed it as Night Sight Video and mention that it can also improve Daytime videos as well rather than advertising it as better in all scenes. In my testing, it blew out the highlights several times in brighter scenes where the regular video mode would have been just fine.
Would we even use the Video boost feature over time since it takes so long to upload the video and process it. And the size of the processed video also seems to be high!!
The night beach vid looks way better on the pixel. The noise and detail are way better. All around detail is better with video boost even in the daylight and dynamic range is better.
I wonder if you can help me. I took a bunch of Video Boost-ed videos and now I'm trying to share them via Google Drive and they appear flat, with little color. Why is that? I also tried uploading directly to Twitter and TH-cam and same thing. I haven't published them because they appear flat in the preview.
I would say the method of execution so far is pretty bad. Each video you take, it needs to upload 1.7 GB per minute, and where I live all households have 5 to 10 mpbs upload speed, which means it would take 30 it 60 minutes of each minute of the video to upload. So a 5 minute video could easily take 5 hours to upload. I bet that would consume the phone's battery like crazy trying to upload a video for 5 hours straight. I wouldn't use it. Almost never because of the inconvenience. I would only use it if it worked for my already normally recorded and uploaded videos, which I don't think it does yet.
Great review as usual by the way! I have tried this feature and it is inconvenient. Not only does it take long to obtain the final copy, you need to set it up every time you open your camera app. If I was on a cruise or a location with no internet for days, i cannot utilize this feature. All this work and time just to have it just look brighter with better stabilization. I'd be annoyed to go through this process and finding out its not even that much better.
The feature seems to improve the smoothness, and that's what I like the most. Was the S23 Ultra set at high bitrate? I normally see much smoother videos from this phone.
Thanks a lot!... A very good review. I tried it and it looks better on the phone but it still takes huge space after boosting and when I look at the file on the computer - it looks like sh*t. I also never get a notification that it finished processing. Am I doing something wrong?
Is the clarity and quality changing much, if any, or is boosting it strictly a contrast thing? I tried taking some test footage on my phone but all I noticed was the brightness went up. Do I need to see it on a larger screen to get the full picture?
No you don't. You are seeing real life differences and not the misleading hyped up 'results'. Don't get me wrong though, Video Boost has great potential and can only get better.
@@neilmcguinness4422 so even on a bigger, better screen, the difference is just a bit brighter and slightly denoised video? I'm not really complaining, I actually really like the video from my Pixel but I'm just curious when I would want to use video boost specifically.
So 1080p preview is nearly the same size as 4K boosted video? My own short test have results all over the place and as I only have 1 phone couldn't compare 4K to 4K. I think major tech review sites like Verge are hyping the feature more than testing as they compared the 1080p COVER to boosted 4K
When a boosted video is shared via Google Photos and subsequently downloaded or saved to another account, it is saved or downloaded in 1080p rather than the original 4K resolution, resulting in a downgraded version. Are you experiencing this issue on the Pixel 8 Pro? Essentially, the 4K version cannot be located on the device, and sharing it via Google Photos for download is not possible
Like you said, iPhone's video is still better. Boosted video looks washed out with less contrast, especially in direct sunlight but better in the shade. Having said this, this is just the beginning. Google can improve it with time taking all user's feedback into consideration. Bdw, great video as always.
Two questions: 1. Which among is best for vlogging Pixel 8/ iPhone 15 / S23 Ultra?? 2. Which phone is PHONE of the YEAR for you? I really like watching your content. It’s true to life.
if u want video go for iphone,but if u want photo with best overall experience go with s23 ultra Note:if u want to choose s23 ultra i think you should wait for s24 ultra
No doubt the iphone...the quality is just something else. Just look at the ois. Plus camera leaning apps are much better optimized for iphones. But the stills on pixel and sammy are amazing.
Overall I'm not a fan of Video Boost. I don't like how it brightens up the shadows (and whole image actually) too much and also adds too much color saturation. I DO like however how it removes noise, adds sharpness and improves stabilization. Only in very dark scenerios it can result in a better useful video.
What's the use if u need to upload it for post processing and it sometimes takes weeks to get the results lol. Im pixel user myself but such a dumb move by Google
I think the iPhone is the best as it's the most reliable. S23 is close. The Pixel is something I wouldn't daily as it's just too obsessed with tweaking footage in unrealistic ways, which is a big no-no. I want to capture what I see, not what Instagram will like better, there's filters for that.
Regardless if the Pixel is better, it still requires 'hours' to send a video through the Google processing servers. The worst part is if you waited all that time to receive a video like the one you showed us where the purple was turned blue. That would make the video unusable, and unfortunately you wasted all that time waiting when you could've been processing the video yourself. IMO, this feature is another gimmick that needs to be tailored still.
11:40 - Pixels can't seem to be able to handle purple lights correctly. Whenever I take pictures of any light source that is purple, they come out looking like shown in the video.
I'm wondering if turning on HDR10 improves the video quality with video boost at all... I assume so, but can't find any information on it yet... Did you have HDR10 enabled or disabled in this test?
@@franciscoreyes4067 then I believe you don't understand what Video Boost is lol. You literally cannot turn on HDR10 when you turn on Video Boost. Once you turn on Video Boost on the 8 Pro, it automatically turns off HDR10.
It looks to me the only thing that video boost does is: - Turning off stabilization - Recording in RAW / LOG - Uploading to the cloud for stabilization and color grading?! Take the iPhone, record in ProRES with LOG and color grading it yourself to compare it? :)
The quality of the video one can get by manually grading log from an iphone is hugely dependant on their experience in this field, and there is basically no skill ceiling. Google chose to make processed log something all of their users with enabled devices can access, rather than it being something only a few ever try and the rest just marvel at by watching videos of it. Hopefully they address some key weaknesses in the future. It's even quite possible that they bring this feature down to some non-pro devices when they've polished it more, making it so limited now just to avoid getting criticism from quite as many users.
What I heard from it is that Google records some sort of Raw Video, a very compressed version of Raw (ProRes raw but it's Google's flavour of Raw) and then sends it to the cloud.. apply hdr+ on each frame.. since it is a raw still image.. more data to work on.. after all the processing.. sends it back to you. Google needs to make this on-device one day.
@@tuapuikiaSo by that reckoning you are happy paying money for a device with an inferior chipset?. For what you are paying your device should be capable of carrying out AI improvements and enhancements on the device itself.
@@neilmcguinness4422lol video boost obviously requires a ton of processing power, not even Apple silicon is efficient enough to do that much work with 5000mah
Cumbersome (off by default, but I get that they are slowly testing it and rolling out), slow, energy consuming (upload/download, server side encoding) and the end result is a flat, washed out, overexposed, oversaturated video with clipped highlights and medium details. This looks like the overbrightened night sight photos we got for years (until they toned it down - at least with regards to the sky - months ago) plus a whole swath of other issues. Not a fan and don't think backend tweaks will help much.
I don't know, whenever you said the iPhone was better, it looked bad to me. I guess it's all a matter of taste. I don't like videos which are too warm.
as a samsung fanboy and iphone hater, still i would say, iPhone is still the king of video,whether its daylight/night/cinematic video, its a clean sheet for iphone. ah come on, here google introduced the most ineefficient solution for improving video, and still falling behind iphone,which does the same result,but better, in real time.
A lot of key aspects were not explained in this video. For eg: What size is used on your google photos account? is the temporary Huge file? or is it the processed video? or both? Also, I use a pixel 1 to upload everything (Free unlimited storage forever) Will this boosted feature work? I Have the upload turned off on pixel 8 pro. I click to manually upload the video to use this feature and it uploads it on storage saver. I enabled original quality and then turned off backup and its always uploading in storage saver. So this means that the video ends up looking like absolute useless footage. Also theres no comparison with HDR video on. its only 4k30 fps. From what i tested HDR video looks almost the same as the boosted. So i dont actually feel its worth all this trouble. If anyone has more info on this or know a video reviewing this to every detail let me know.
1st point clearly answered in the video, this temp file doesn't take anything from your storage only the processed video will take from your storage if u decide to back it up. The problem is you're mixing unrelated things to the feature, storage saver doesn't impact this feature, 2ndly the video has to be recorded and uploaded from the 8 Pro as mentioned in the video so, using the Pixel 1 doesn't allow this to happen but may be after you get your hands on the final video then you can send it over to the Pixel 1 and back it up from there
Still . I want to have back up off and manually upload boosted videos and it only chooses storage saver . I want it to be original when clicking on the cloud and ask backup this one . Them I'll try to backup the processed video .
the boosted video is wayyy too washed out, i think they are trying to brighten the dark area which doesn't work well on videos, and the final processed videos are very flat and lack of contrast.
I feel this feature, like the thermometer is just a gimmick. To me the "quality" of the presented video is no better. They just run the HDR+ through it and spit it back out and its denoised, still looks like crappy mobile video, and it takes ages to get back. You'd be better off getting an app like "Motion Cam" recording Raw video, and post processing it yourself in Resolve. You'd get better results. I have a feeling that all google is doing here is along with the main regular video, it records the raw dng frames straight from the sensor (pay attention to the video boost resolution in the info, its the full sensor resolution *binned*), puts them into package (video boost file aka ZIP file of raw dng frames*, hence the extra large file size) and then uploads that then runs their HDR+ algorithm then sends it back. I could be wrong but that sounds like what they're doing.
looks like the boosted process is over exposing a bit. might be worth trying reducing the ev by a third of a stop when actually shooting the video you want boosted.
I did one last night. Less than a minute long and took hours to get it back. I can only imagine how long u waited for all these samples lol they need to improve the time. Is ridiculous
Going into the advanced settings for the Camera, you'll find "Store Videos Efficiently" and if you enable that, it'll use the much smaller H.265/HEVC format and help with large video files.
Honestly, I can't anything that pixel couldn't do directly on a phone. That night mode in this video doing same as xiaomi video night mode for about two years.
wtf.. why in this video S23U so shaking???? It never happen to my phone on day light, even on night life the stabilization still work so good, just a bit worst compare to 14, 15 Pro Max.
It takes 2/3hours to improve the videos (short ones too).. and without a proper edition options onboard like imovie or any samsung/xiaomi/clip from huawey Im thinking i will sell the Pixel8pro.. it has great photos and a lot of online gimmics ..
But in the last footage in extreme low light the pixels video boost has the highest amount of details and lowest amount of noise even comoared to the iohone but with the sacrifice of dynamic range
Video boost is done offline and suuuuuper slow..... Is it worth it? it's kinda hype for now until Google make it a bit more faster when processing the video boost.
@@jg14gerhard_bar i mean the processing of video boost is done in the cloud or Google servers not on the phone. Its super slow also ... hopefully they fixed it someday
@@IDTRI am using 8 Pro and tried it.... it could be upload speed if youre maxing out 10mins 4K 30 but for short clip which i have tried it even my video is just 1080 30fps very short like 20secs it will take me hours to have the video boost completed. So its not 100% uploading unless youre wifi and internet speed is really slow
what a disappointment, but also totally expected of Google. They do a big song and dance to say how amazing something is going to be, but then reality hits and it's a miss. The fact that they have to upload the video, process it for hours, and then save it to the cloud and it STILL isn't better than what the iPhone can take and process in real time is just, kind sad. Especially when it comes to HDR, iPhone is over here doing a pretty good job with their Dolby Vision recording, meanwhile the Pixel blows out highlights and changes the colors of lights when in HDR AFTER processing it for hours.
Something worth knowing: when shooting regular HDR on pixel phones, you should always go into manual controls and reduce exposure about 1-1.5 big ticks (-5 is the lowest you can go). This will massively improve the video by reducing highlight clipping and bringing both shadows and midtones down to their realistic appearance. This improves contrast significantly.
Google seems to have a similar and unfortunate philosophy when it comes to video boost even in SDR, so you might be able to improve the output by lowering exposure a bit.
Oo that's really interesting! I've always turned off HDR in video on my Pixel 7 because of how noisy it is in the shadows. I will try this for sure. Any other tips to improve video on pixel?
Yes. I've tried that and it works wonderfully and the highlights are much more well balanced than in this video on my Pixel 8 Pro:)
Thanks for the tip. I use Motion Cam Pro because the quality is just outstanding but I've been having issues with it as files are being corrupted and there's nothing I can do except just lose the footage.
@@tanvir10029 Lowering exposure will definitely help with that, since shadows will be dark as they should be, and not show noise so easily.
I don't shoot a lot of video but I think that HDR mode isn't *always* worth it, even with the exposure correction. For example when filming kids indoors, you might like the color pop that HDR provides, but the video will look a bit darker than a native-SDR equivalent once you send it over a messenger like whatsapp and the HDR is lost. To clarify, it will still look brighter than SDR on your device, even after lowering exposure by 1.5 ticks for HDR.
Something else I noticed, though probably niche, - I filmed a concert recently where I went back and forth between 1x and 2x zoom and experienced occasional audio inconsistencies during the videos. This is likely caused by the audio zoom feature, enabled by default. Some might like what it does overall, but the jarring transitions I experienced made it less than ideal. The idea is that it blocks out noise around you and focuses on the sound coming from where the camera is pointed, but sometimes the surroundings would get muffled too much and then pop back to audible. It wasn't terrible, but if I had a second shot at it, I would film the entire thing without this feature.
It drops the video , DONT try
I saw a video from another person which compares normal version and boosted version and it was a drastic improvement in low light but ofc he didn't compare with other phones but it did made huge difference with and without.
I saw some of these videos and I think they compare the temp file or the 1080p preview file to the processed video and that's why there's a big difference, but if you want to compare 4K30 to 4K30 you have to record twice.
@@IDTR Yeah,that could be the reason.
A bit disappointed with the amount of difference they actually showed in the ads and now it's just not worth the time at all.
Or to record with two Pixel 8 pro at the same time.
Many people get dragged in by all the misleading hype surrounding Google's video boost. It shows good potential, but game changing it certainly isn't.
Am expecting it.to improve over time but not bad for the first trial
Video Boost does seem like a cool features but I think Google needs to just make better hardware when it comes to video.
I think the hardware is impressive but they need to change how they tweak things, for example tuning down the exposure at night to avoid blown out highlights in videos which is a very simple fix or take the subject isolation seriously because they can already provide a great subject isolation in Google photos but they don't care about doing the same in the camera app and so on, they are small things but they are not giving that much of a attention to them
@@IDTRcorrect , the hardware on the pixel 8 pro is very impressive , but unfortunately is the processing that Google comes up short with, I'm currently using the 8 pro and to be fair have no complaints about it , great video great content 👍👍
@@1m_megapixels i am using Pixel 8 pro from past few months. my brother is using iphone 12 pro max from past few years. iphone 12 max cpu is way faster than pixel 8 pro cpu. i still feel i should have bought iphone 15 pro or max, all processing is done locally. i don't need to video boost upload and wait for it to process. i feel, no phone can beat iphone videos. my personnel choice preference, i use iphone 12 pro max to take videos eventhough i have pixel 8 pro. i never had pixel, wanted to fell and use. but for sure, my next phone upgrade i will got with iphone. i am not a iphone person, in the past i have used oneplus, samsung and now pixel.
@@jagadeesham8535 this is what I meant by my original post. Better hardware on device trumps processing video in the cloud. Especially considering you don't know what the results will be from said online processing. I'd rather get the results right away on device.
Appreciate the video as usual! Good to see you compare with a normal 4K recording. I have different results though. I was also shooting the same video twice (but indoor), both 4K 30fps, the boosted version was so much better! Way less noise, better colors. Also, comparing to 15 pro max and S23 ultra, going from the worst to best stabilization is huge to me. On the other hand, I am also disappointed that we can only boost the main sensor.
Thanks for sharing your experience, I also really like the stabilization of video boost, I will test it even further in more scenarios later
On 85" TV at 2160 the Pixel videos always have more defined frames and overall a more pleasant scene; the iPhone always offers a scene that is too warm for me; at night on the beach we can notice greater definition on the sand and on the building with the Pixel 8 Pro; overall iPhone is not an absolute benchmark; every smartphone has advantages in recording, just like the iPhone has defects.
Personal preferences are ok, but the definition is an objective parameter, and it is not correct to say that the iPhone offers the most defined image at night. 😉
iPhone videography anyday. Photos from android anyday.
yup agree for that✨
Definitely. But pixel has improved a lot this year. Video from it is definitely in top 5 now.
Yes I agree. iPhone top in video! Pixel 8 pro is the next best
Android means? You should tell the name of pixel here instead of Android
Don’t agree. Everything is better on the iPhone.
Impressive how the S23 is holding up despite being old already! Im sure the S24 will take over next month!
All three of the phones in the comparison had times where they looked much better than the others. What I've gained from this video is that the S23 Ultra is still very competitive despite being older than the 15PM and Pixel 8 with video boost.
that Sony Ericsson K800 at the background brings so much memories!!! thank you so much for such well detailed video about Video boost for Pixel 8 Pro ❤❤
12:12 & 12:17 Pixel is doing great with shadow details. With a little bit of contrast, highlights etc tuning the P8pro would be as good as iphone if not better.
Don't think so, unfortunately.
@@megamastahBro it looks awesome up close, just zoom in you'll see it clean even though the sign is blown out
I must be looking at different footage. The iPhone quality when lighting isn't perfect, still drops the framerate to compensate and then the EIS kicks in and makes the image quality even worse. Google needs to make it so the video isn't so cropped in though. The iPhone and Samsung are considerably more zoomed out.
Based on what we're seeing wirh the temp files, it looks like this new feature is shooting in LOG with high bit rate and then uploading to Google's servers for colour correction, stabilisation and noise reduction.
I was hoping for a little more from video boost. The iPhone and Samsung are pushing those outputs into a video file that is pretty much ready for you as soon as you are done filming. Video boost looks to put the Pixel on a similar level, but removes many features and takes over an hour to process on Google servers...
I'm kinda confused as to why the unprocessed video's dimensions are 2268 x 4032 for 4K. Is it different where you live? Normally it's 3840 x 2160...
hmm interesting results, other people who tested it against the iPhone said the Pixel is better. I heard that the quality is widly different if the backup method to Google Photos is Original File instead of high quality. Which one do you have enabled?
But I still gotta give credit to iPhone for it doing all the processing on device and still being (in this test) better imo.
Haven't seen anyone comparing it to iphones till now
Am using original quality backup
@@IDTRfair enough, Thanks for the video. The iPhone remains the King in Smartphones when it comes to video.
@@eulehund99king of those ugly warm colours
@@dinkoist🤝🏽
I like the way the colors pop on the Pixel. Especially the greens. The HDR will raise the shadows and highlights which can be adjusted by the sliders to your preference. Or record it without HDR. I noticed it had an exposure shift on the lights. They were good and then got brighter. Shot without exposure lock I assume.
Nice Side-by-Side. However, I don't see less-contrast issues from my Video Boost results (SDR) and they look great. Were these videos recorded with 10-bit HDR turned on or off?
12:02 - to my eyes the Pixel has more details than the iPhone
I share the same opinion.
Exactly ,I felt the same and I felt 15 is almost struggling to focus
I think he can be the best judge of that since he is in the environment, especially because he uses the word “natural”. I can see how he comes to that conclusion, as it looks like video boost is trying to take too much details from the shadows which is giving its darker elements, a washed out appearance.
I am still confused on how it is processed. It must be shooting in 4K and 1080 simultaneously which leads me to believe that it may be using both files to process. I believe the main GNK sensor also has "three different ISO modes" so perhaps it is shooting the 1080 in a high ISO mode and the 4k in a lower ISO. I'm surprised the video did not outright slay the Samsung and iPhone. I do believe they should have also marketed it as Night Sight Video and mention that it can also improve Daytime videos as well rather than advertising it as better in all scenes. In my testing, it blew out the highlights several times in brighter scenes where the regular video mode would have been just fine.
Am not sure if they also use the 1080p
Would we even use the Video boost feature over time since it takes so long to upload the video and process it. And the size of the processed video also seems to be high!!
The night beach vid looks way better on the pixel. The noise and detail are way better. All around detail is better with video boost even in the daylight and dynamic range is better.
The way how google stabilized the footage on that night video is quite amazing.
Yes
I wonder if you can help me. I took a bunch of Video Boost-ed videos and now I'm trying to share them via Google Drive and they appear flat, with little color. Why is that? I also tried uploading directly to Twitter and TH-cam and same thing. I haven't published them because they appear flat in the preview.
What's that beat? So soothing and calm. Really went with the vibe of the video. Lol
I would say the method of execution so far is pretty bad. Each video you take, it needs to upload 1.7 GB per minute, and
where I live all households have 5 to 10 mpbs upload speed, which means it would take 30 it 60 minutes of each minute of the video to upload.
So a 5 minute video could easily take 5 hours to upload. I bet that would consume the phone's battery like crazy trying to upload a video for 5 hours straight.
I wouldn't use it. Almost never because of the inconvenience.
I would only use it if it worked for my already normally recorded and uploaded videos, which I don't think it does yet.
Google will no doubt improve the processing since they can control it better on their end.. a year from now this feature will be much better
Great review as usual by the way! I have tried this feature and it is inconvenient. Not only does it take long to obtain the final copy, you need to set it up every time you open your camera app. If I was on a cruise or a location with no internet for days, i cannot utilize this feature. All this work and time just to have it just look brighter with better stabilization. I'd be annoyed to go through this process and finding out its not even that much better.
Thanks Emad.
Do you see improvements on the horizon?
JaneLee - in Suburban Philadelphia
12/14/23
The feature seems to improve the smoothness, and that's what I like the most. Was the S23 Ultra set at high bitrate? I normally see much smoother videos from this phone.
Thanks a lot!... A very good review.
I tried it and it looks better on the phone but it still takes huge space after boosting and when I look at the file on the computer - it looks like sh*t. I also never get a notification that it finished processing. Am I doing something wrong?
Loving your review! I have a question though, where did you shoot the samples in the end? The place looks beautiful!
Al Seef Heritage Souq in Dubai
شكراً@@IDTR
1. iPhone 15 Pro Max
2. Pixel 8 Pro
3. Galaxy S23 Ultra
Have you tried or reviewed the xepria 1 V?
Best video boost comparison on TH-cam! Thank you
Is the clarity and quality changing much, if any, or is boosting it strictly a contrast thing? I tried taking some test footage on my phone but all I noticed was the brightness went up. Do I need to see it on a larger screen to get the full picture?
No you don't. You are seeing real life differences and not the misleading hyped up 'results'. Don't get me wrong though, Video Boost has great potential and can only get better.
@@neilmcguinness4422 so even on a bigger, better screen, the difference is just a bit brighter and slightly denoised video? I'm not really complaining, I actually really like the video from my Pixel but I'm just curious when I would want to use video boost specifically.
So 1080p preview is nearly the same size as 4K boosted video? My own short test have results all over the place and as I only have 1 phone couldn't compare 4K to 4K. I think major tech review sites like Verge are hyping the feature more than testing as they compared the 1080p COVER to boosted 4K
When a boosted video is shared via Google Photos and subsequently downloaded or saved to another account, it is saved or downloaded in 1080p rather than the original 4K resolution, resulting in a downgraded version. Are you experiencing this issue on the Pixel 8 Pro? Essentially, the 4K version cannot be located on the device, and sharing it via Google Photos for download is not possible
Like you said, iPhone's video is still better. Boosted video looks washed out with less contrast, especially in direct sunlight but better in the shade.
Having said this, this is just the beginning. Google can improve it with time taking all user's feedback into consideration.
Bdw, great video as always.
Glad you liked it, yes I am expecting future improvements too and it's not bad for the first trial
@@IDTR yes there is chance of improvement. With each update it ll get better.
Most of the time the S23 had the best clarity
Is that a sony cybershot setup as a prop to the side? K790/k800
K800
was the HDR enabled on the pixel 8 on the boosted?
Pixel tried so hard , but iPhone still wins in videos
Two questions:
1. Which among is best for vlogging Pixel 8/ iPhone 15 / S23 Ultra??
2. Which phone is PHONE of the YEAR for you?
I really like watching your content. It’s true to life.
=
if u want video go for iphone,but if u want photo with best overall experience go with s23 ultra
Note:if u want to choose s23 ultra i think you should wait for s24 ultra
Go for the iPhone no brainer
@@Short_N_Simplewhat about pixel 8 pro video ?
No doubt the iphone...the quality is just something else. Just look at the ois. Plus camera leaning apps are much better optimized for iphones. But the stills on pixel and sammy are amazing.
Overall I'm not a fan of Video Boost. I don't like how it brightens up the shadows (and whole image actually) too much and also adds too much color saturation. I DO like however how it removes noise, adds sharpness and improves stabilization. Only in very dark scenerios it can result in a better useful video.
I think adding more contrast to morning videos will make it so much better
This seems like a feature that will be really useful in a few years once the hardware is more powerful/software is more refined
What's the use if u need to upload it for post processing and it sometimes takes weeks to get the results lol. Im pixel user myself but such a dumb move by Google
I think the iPhone is the best as it's the most reliable. S23 is close. The Pixel is something I wouldn't daily as it's just too obsessed with tweaking footage in unrealistic ways, which is a big no-no. I want to capture what I see, not what Instagram will like better, there's filters for that.
Regardless if the Pixel is better, it still requires 'hours' to send a video through the Google processing servers. The worst part is if you waited all that time to receive a video like the one you showed us where the purple was turned blue. That would make the video unusable, and unfortunately you wasted all that time waiting when you could've been processing the video yourself. IMO, this feature is another gimmick that needs to be tailored still.
11:40 - Pixels can't seem to be able to handle purple lights correctly. Whenever I take pictures of any light source that is purple, they come out looking like shown in the video.
Pixel boosted is best in day light
S23 best at Night ❤❤❤❤
Iphones balanced both modes❤❤❤
Please tell me the last song that you used in comparison part
the camera quality on all the 3 phones looks great to me, pixel looked realistic but iphone's warm footage looks more apealing
I'm wondering if turning on HDR10 improves the video quality with video boost at all... I assume so, but can't find any information on it yet... Did you have HDR10 enabled or disabled in this test?
You can't use HDR when using Video Boost
@@JayD_5446 You absolutely can 😅 I never use video boost without HDR
@@franciscoreyes4067 then I believe you don't understand what Video Boost is lol. You literally cannot turn on HDR10 when you turn on Video Boost. Once you turn on Video Boost on the 8 Pro, it automatically turns off HDR10.
@@JayD_5446 nope, maybe your pixel is broken :(
@@franciscoreyes4067 👍🏻 yes, I'm sure that's what it is.
9:04 FYI: it appears like video stabilization is OFF with s23 ultra.
It looks to me the only thing that video boost does is:
- Turning off stabilization
- Recording in RAW / LOG
- Uploading to the cloud for stabilization and color grading?!
Take the iPhone, record in ProRES with LOG and color grading it yourself to compare it? :)
The quality of the video one can get by manually grading log from an iphone is hugely dependant on their experience in this field, and there is basically no skill ceiling.
Google chose to make processed log something all of their users with enabled devices can access, rather than it being something only a few ever try and the rest just marvel at by watching videos of it. Hopefully they address some key weaknesses in the future. It's even quite possible that they bring this feature down to some non-pro devices when they've polished it more, making it so limited now just to avoid getting criticism from quite as many users.
@@Maxoverpower Dafuq? There are plenty of apps that let every noob color grade footage without any knowledge. 🤷🏻♂️
What I heard from it is that Google records some sort of Raw Video, a very compressed version of Raw (ProRes raw but it's Google's flavour of Raw) and then sends it to the cloud.. apply hdr+ on each frame.. since it is a raw still image.. more data to work on.. after all the processing.. sends it back to you. Google needs to make this on-device one day.
I don't want Google do this post processing on mobile device. It defeat the purpose of cloud processing technology and waste mobile phone battery.
@@tuapuikiaSo by that reckoning you are happy paying money for a device with an inferior chipset?. For what you are paying your device should be capable of carrying out AI improvements and enhancements on the device itself.
@@neilmcguinness4422 I have 1tb google one subscription with unlimited 5g internet.
@@neilmcguinness4422 finally someone who gets it.
@@neilmcguinness4422lol video boost obviously requires a ton of processing power, not even Apple silicon is efficient enough to do that much work with 5000mah
Cumbersome (off by default, but I get that they are slowly testing it and rolling out), slow, energy consuming (upload/download, server side encoding) and the end result is a flat, washed out, overexposed, oversaturated video with clipped highlights and medium details.
This looks like the overbrightened night sight photos we got for years (until they toned it down - at least with regards to the sky - months ago) plus a whole swath of other issues. Not a fan and don't think backend tweaks will help much.
The stabilisation on boosted video are great😮
I don't know, whenever you said the iPhone was better, it looked bad to me. I guess it's all a matter of taste. I don't like videos which are too warm.
as a samsung fanboy and iphone hater, still i would say, iPhone is still the king of video,whether its daylight/night/cinematic video, its a clean sheet for iphone. ah come on, here google introduced the most ineefficient solution for improving video, and still falling behind iphone,which does the same result,but better, in real time.
i think there is no need of Boosted option in Day time or in a Good light .
A lot of key aspects were not explained in this video.
For eg: What size is used on your google photos account? is the temporary Huge file? or is it the processed video? or both?
Also, I use a pixel 1 to upload everything (Free unlimited storage forever) Will this boosted feature work?
I Have the upload turned off on pixel 8 pro. I click to manually upload the video to use this feature and it uploads it on storage saver.
I enabled original quality and then turned off backup and its always uploading in storage saver. So this means that the video ends up looking like absolute useless footage.
Also theres no comparison with HDR video on. its only 4k30 fps.
From what i tested HDR video looks almost the same as the boosted. So i dont actually feel its worth all this trouble.
If anyone has more info on this or know a video reviewing this to every detail let me know.
1st point clearly answered in the video, this temp file doesn't take anything from your storage only the processed video will take from your storage if u decide to back it up.
The problem is you're mixing unrelated things to the feature, storage saver doesn't impact this feature, 2ndly the video has to be recorded and uploaded from the 8 Pro as mentioned in the video so, using the Pixel 1 doesn't allow this to happen but may be after you get your hands on the final video then you can send it over to the Pixel 1 and back it up from there
Still . I want to have back up off and manually upload boosted videos and it only chooses storage saver . I want it to be original when clicking on the cloud and ask backup this one . Them I'll try to backup the processed video .
Why video from iPhone have yellow filter? Looks like color had been "enhanced" and look weird.
the boosted video is wayyy too washed out, i think they are trying to brighten the dark area which doesn't work well on videos, and the final processed videos are very flat and lack of contrast.
ur kinda blind, in low light the iphone is very noisy and lacks detail
I feel this feature, like the thermometer is just a gimmick. To me the "quality" of the presented video is no better. They just run the HDR+ through it and spit it back out and its denoised, still looks like crappy mobile video, and it takes ages to get back. You'd be better off getting an app like "Motion Cam" recording Raw video, and post processing it yourself in Resolve. You'd get better results. I have a feeling that all google is doing here is along with the main regular video, it records the raw dng frames straight from the sensor (pay attention to the video boost resolution in the info, its the full sensor resolution *binned*), puts them into package (video boost file aka ZIP file of raw dng frames*, hence the extra large file size) and then uploads that then runs their HDR+ algorithm then sends it back. I could be wrong but that sounds like what they're doing.
I think the video boost version is nearly similar to what your eyes can see. The consistency of exposure is just a chef's kiss
De ce nu filmezi la 4k 60 fps?
looks like the boosted process is over exposing a bit. might be worth trying reducing the ev by a third of a stop when actually shooting the video you want boosted.
I did one last night. Less than a minute long and took hours to get it back. I can only imagine how long u waited for all these samples lol they need to improve the time. Is ridiculous
Wait for s24 ultra ❤
samsung needs to make their videos brighter, i hope my s24 u im gonna buy will improve on the video and photo
It's funny your results. Personally I liked the pixel's results. I'm thinking the results are really down to personal taste no?
How can I buy a Google Pixel 8 Pro in Dubai?
how can you say that night video is better on iPhone if the pixel crushes the iphone with much better details, brighter and less noise videos.
This is definitely a phase 1. They want this to work on all phones especially low end
Boost is for night movies
Going into the advanced settings for the Camera, you'll find "Store Videos Efficiently" and if you enable that, it'll use the much smaller H.265/HEVC format and help with large video files.
Honestly, I can't anything that pixel couldn't do directly on a phone. That night mode in this video doing same as xiaomi video night mode for about two years.
2:55 -3:54 and 3:55 - ... same clips twice? Am I missing something?
wtf.. why in this video S23U so shaking???? It never happen to my phone on day light, even on night life the stabilization still work so good, just a bit worst compare to 14, 15 Pro Max.
IS THAT A SONY K800i??? I LOVED THAT PHONE!!!!
Which smartphone has more and more comprehensive features ❤
God!! Taking 2hrs for video boost processing is a lot. And 180mb for a 1min 14seconds video is also very high isnt it??
Am I crazy or is that a Sony Ericsson K800 in the background?
Trong khi phát trực tiếp hay video dài thì phần cứng tốt có lợi thế hơn nhiều phần mềm
Would like to see a review of the Sony K800i in the backdrop.
I did it a long time ago, the video is still available to watch
Any way to use this video boost feature on pixel 6?
So it’s doing what apple did with xdr video shooting 2x as fast then stacking the frames
Judging from this comparison, I don't like it.
After boost, the night video doesn't look like night anymore. I hate over-processed fake images.
It takes 2/3hours to improve the videos (short ones too).. and without a proper edition options onboard like imovie or any samsung/xiaomi/clip from huawey Im thinking i will sell the Pixel8pro.. it has great photos and a lot of online gimmics ..
But in the last footage in extreme low light the pixels video boost has the highest amount of details and lowest amount of noise even comoared to the iohone but with the sacrifice of dynamic range
Why don't you talk about the better definition on the pixel's videos?
This location is Abra, Bur Dubai. I stay near that area.
Video boost is done offline and suuuuuper slow..... Is it worth it? it's kinda hype for now until Google make it a bit more faster when processing the video boost.
The problem is the temp file is huge and it takes a long time to upload
Video boost is not done offline...
@@jg14gerhard_bar i mean the processing of video boost is done in the cloud or Google servers not on the phone. Its super slow also ... hopefully they fixed it someday
@@IDTRI am using 8 Pro and tried it.... it could be upload speed if youre maxing out 10mins 4K 30 but for short clip which i have tried it even my video is just 1080 30fps very short like 20secs it will take me hours to have the video boost completed. So its not 100% uploading unless youre wifi and internet speed is really slow
I want a 8 pro so badly
what a disappointment, but also totally expected of Google. They do a big song and dance to say how amazing something is going to be, but then reality hits and it's a miss. The fact that they have to upload the video, process it for hours, and then save it to the cloud and it STILL isn't better than what the iPhone can take and process in real time is just, kind sad.
Especially when it comes to HDR, iPhone is over here doing a pretty good job with their Dolby Vision recording, meanwhile the Pixel blows out highlights and changes the colors of lights when in HDR AFTER processing it for hours.
Finally
It takes 30+hours minimum to process a 19sw ond video. Absolutely ridiculous
Hello, why the Boost video takes 15 days to save a 5 second video!!!! It's abused!