>>2919607>Digitally faked bokeh looks like garbage.I think you mean Gaussian blur looks like garbage.
But it doesn't have to be the case, especially with dual cameras.
Consider 2 possible scenarios:
1. The longer lens focused on minimum focusing distance, takes the first photo, in order to produce some *real*, optical bokeh. Then it focuses on the subject and takes the second photo. The second lens is used to triangulate the distance of the subject, in order to isolate it and "paste" the bokeh shit behind it with some automated masking.
2. Since you have 2 cameras, you can triangulate any distance on the frame and create a distance map. Then, in software, use some very basic Ray tracing to calculate what real bokeh would look like. Quite later, As processing power increases, you could create and run models of any lens you like, simulating their aberrations and every other characteristic that affects bokeh, creating simulated bokeh which is far beyond indistinguishable from the real thing.