This wasn't possible with the original Duo because there was no rear camera, so the display has to be folded 360 degrees to take a picture. Tap an image in the gallery, and the other screen shows editing options. With the viewfinder on one screen, your image gallery is on the other. One thing that's quite cool is that you can do more with the two screens. This is an area that I judge based on how many images I have to delete after testing. It's even harder to focus on the subject that you're trying to focus on. When you open up the Camera app at night, the frame rate in the viewfinder drops to a point where it actually gets hard to use. That's a minor issue though, because the major issue is nighttime performance, and I'm not talking about the quality of photos. That's something that other OEMs worked out a while ago, that if your subject is not in the middle, it should still be focused on. In daytime, it's pretty easy to get right, although it does weirdly try super hard to focus on the middle of the viewfinder. However, it certainly won't be winning any awards. I'm pleased to say that the camera is decent. The model that Microsoft sent me for review is the one with 256GB of storage, in Obsidian.
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