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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Season’s new phones are all about selfies

Chris Weber of Mobile Devices Sales of Microsoft presents the new Lumia Selfie App for smartphones at the consumer electronic fair IFA in Berlin on Thursday. (Associated Press)
Frank Jordans And Anick Jesdanun Associated Press

BERLIN – Visit any tourist destination, and you’re bound to see individuals and groups taking photos of themselves for sharing on social media. It’s a declaration to the world that they were there.

Pop stars such as Rihanna and Justin Bieber have helped popularize the trend, too, by posting stylized selfies to their leagues of followers. Even politicians are taking selfies with ordinary folks these days as a way of showing how close they are to voters.

So it was only a matter of time before tech companies responded with phones and apps specifically designed to help people take more and better selfies.

Several phones unveiled at the IFA tech show in Berlin this week sport higher-resolution front cameras, so selfies will come out sharper. Some even have apps that let you use the rear cameras, too. That means even clearer photos – and the use of the flash, if you need it.

Promoting new phones as the perfect selfie camera is a natural move for manufacturers scrambling to stand out.

“The ‘selfie phone’ race resembles the megapixel race for cameras on the back of the phone,” said Gerrit Schneemann, an analyst at research firm IHS. “Handset makers try to satisfy a specific use case by including more powerful features in the front camera.”

One of the phones Microsoft announced Thursday, the Lumia 730, has a 5-megapixel front camera and software to help users touch up their image after taking it.

For even better shots, it’ll be possible to take selfies with the 6.7-megapixel camera on the rear. Users won’t be able to see themselves on the screen, but an app called Lumia Selfie will use face-detection technology and beep to tell users where to hold the camera.

Microsoft’s announcement follows Samsung’s new Galaxy Note phones unveiled Wednesday. The Note 4 and the Note Edge come with a special wide-angle option, which allows users to fit more people into their selfies by stitching multiple images together.

The feature could help avoid bloopers such as the time Oscars host Ellen DeGeneres snapped a selfie with Meryl Streep, Brad Pitt and Jennifer Lawrence but cut out Jared Leto, who had just won an Academy Award, because he was too far over to the side.

Not to be outdone, PC-maker Lenovo launched its Vibe Z2 and Vibe X2 phones, with 8-megapixel and 5-megapixel front cameras, respectively. The phones will also have a feature that triggers the camera to snap the shot by smiling, blinking or making a “V” gesture.

Taiwanese phone manufacturer HTC also unveiled an 8-megapixel front-facing camera for its new Desire 820 device, while China’s Huawei earlier this year released the Ascend Mate2 4G. The Mate 2 has a 5-megapixel front camera and a wide-angle option similar to Samsung’s.

But some are wondering whether users will really embrace the idea of capturing themselves in high resolution.

“I’m not sure people want selfies to be very sophisticated to start with,” said Steve Jones, a professor of communications at the University of Illinois at Chicago. “There’s something to be said about having selfies be kind of the modern-day version of the Polaroid – instant, but it has its own look and had its own style.”

For users who don’t want to send around high-resolution images of themselves without a bit of prior enhancement, Microsoft’s selfie app offers tools that let them make tired eyes bigger, whiten their teeth and slim down like airbrushed models on magazine covers.

Meanwhile, South Korean consumer electronics firm LG presented a refrigerator Thursday that can send pictures of its contents to users while they’re out shopping.

That’s right, your fridge is soon going to be sending you selfies.