Sony’s AI Camera Assistant fails to deliver on its promise
Sony’s latest attempt at computational photography on the Xperia 1 VIII has arrived, and the results are as jarring as the initial marketing samples suggested. The new AI Camera Assistant, intended to guide users toward better composition and exposure, disrupts the shooting experience rather than enhancing the final image.

The assistant operates by injecting itself directly into the camera’s default interface, aggressively surfacing suggestions while a user attempts to frame a shot. Unlike Google’s Camera Coach, which functions as a dedicated, optional educational tool for framing and lens selection, Sony’s version attempts to automate creative choices in real time. A small box constantly occupies the viewfinder, offering preview adjustments that users can accept with a tap or cycle through via swiping.
This implementation prioritizes persistent intervention over utility. By forcing these suggestions into the primary viewfinder, the software creates a cluttered experience that interferes with the basic act of taking a picture. While Sony provides a toggle to disable the feature entirely, its presence as a default setting suggests a fundamental misunderstanding of the balance between algorithmic assistance and user control. Ultimately, the assistant feels less like a professional tool and more like an intrusive overlay that complicates a process that should be seamless.
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