Now that dual rear camera setups have become the norm in the smartphone world, some companies are moving to triple rear camera setups. Samsung is now one of them.
Samsung today introduced the Galaxy A7, a smartphone with three rear cameras. The main 24MP sensor has an f/1.7 aperture, and Samsung says that it lets more light in by combining four pixels into one pixel in low light conditions. There's also a 5MP depth lens to let you add portait mode bokeh effects to your photos, and an 8MP 120-degree wide angle lens will help you capture more in your shots.
The rest of the Galaxy A7's spec list isn't too shabby. It's packing a 6-inch 2220x1080 Super AMOLED display, 2.2GHz octa-core processor, up to 6GB of RAM, and up to 128GB of built-in storage. There's a microSD card slot in there, too, if you need additional storage.
Rounding things out is NFC, a 24MP front-facing camera with f/2.0 aperture, and a 3300mAh battery. On the software side, the Galaxy A7 is running Android 8.0 Oreo.
Samsung will launch the Galaxy A7 in select European and Asian markets this fall, with expanded availability in other markets to follow. No pricing details have been given.