
Just yesterday we talked about the new night mode announced in conjunction with the presentation of the Mi MIX 3 last 27 October that would be also arrived on the Xiaomi Mi 8 Pro. Well, apparently this mode will also be available on the "older" Xiaomi Mi 8, Mi 8 Explorer Edition and Mi MIX 2S so that, at least on paper, should approach the photographic performance of the latest Mi MIX 3.
The good news, for the owners of these three terminals, comes directly from China, or rather, from the latest update released for the closed beta of MIUI 10 available online. As you can see in the image below, which unfortunately is in Chinese, the changelog contains only one entry; that of Night Mode.
Xiaomi Mi 8, Mi 8 Explorer and Mi MIX 2S receive the Night Mode in Beta
Night Mode is a feature that allows users to create clear photos with the least amount of noise possible (white spots on the photo). This of course for photos taken at night or otherwise in places with low light. Below are a couple of examples released by Xiaomi at the presentation of the Mi MIX 3 in which you can see the difference between the first HDR Off, HDR On and Night Mode.
- HDR OFF
- HDR ON
- NIGHT MODE
- HDR OFF
- HDR ON
- NIGHT MODE
- HDR OFF
- HDR ON
- NIGHT MODE
- HDR OFF
- HDR ON
- NIGHT MODE
- HDR OFF
- HDR ON
- NIGHT MODE
In addition to the Night Mode, another function quite requested by the owners of Xiaomi Mi 8, Mi 8 Pro and Mi MIX 2S, and present on the Mi MIX 3, is the super slow motion mode, that is the one that allows you to shoot videos at 960fps, in practice 32 times slower than the real speed.
Also this feature is coming, after the confirmation of the product manager of Xiaomi published on the Chinese social Weibo. This is made possible by the fact that the 3 devices (4 if we include the Mi 8 Explorer Edition), mount the same hardware: Qualcomm Snapdragon 845 processor, a Sony IMX363 from 12MP as the main sensor and a Samsung S5K3M3 from 12MP as a secondary camera.
In addition, on the MIX 3 Mi you can shoot 4K video to 60fps, a feature perhaps even more useful in common use. What's this going too?