In its full review, I said the Xiaomi 14 Ultra is “the best camera phone I’ve ever used.” Big word, sure, but it earns that praise due to its large image sensor, which can capture stunning images in both daytime and at night. It’s one of the best phone cameras you can buy in 2024 but I suspect it might have its roots in a phone that launched almost 10 years ago.
Back in 2014 I reviewed the Panasonic CM1. At the time it was the pinnacle of smartphone photography, packing a 1-inch type sensor that dwarfed the tiny sensors of other phones at the time. It had a lens made by Leica and it took images that no other camera phone could begin to compete with. It was essentially a compact camera that happened to also be a phone.
As a professional photographer myself, the CM1 was, in many ways, my dream phone. Its camera was good enough that I didn’t need a dedicated camera in my bag all the time. And while the technology around that great camera tech wasn’t quite up to the same high standard, with limited raw support and outdated software, I was sorely disappointed that the phone didn’t hang around.
But Xiaomi seems to have picked up where Panasonic left off, giving the excellent CM1 a 2024 makeover. There are a lot of similarities in the phones. Both have massive 1-inch type image sensors (which don’t actually measure an inch diagonally), both have Leica-engineered optics, both have variable apertures and both have physical camera buttons (if you’re using the Xiaomi’s camera grip).
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When the Xiaomi is wearing its photography case I even think they look similar, with textured black backs, silver rails on the top and bottom and a big central circle where the camera units sit.
There are so many similarities that it almost feels like Xiaomi looked at this long-obsolete phone and thought, “Hey, let’s…
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