Photo: Charlie Sorrel/Cult of Mac For most photos, the iPhone camera proves perfectly adequate. You just hold up your phone, point it, and shoot. The exposure and focus are almost always correct, or ...
Smartphone cameras have reached a point wherein the image quality has gotten so good, that it’s really easy to get confused between a picture shot on a smartphone and one that’s taken from a ...
Obscura 2 gives you powerful camera controls in an easy-to-use package. Photo: Ian Fuchs/Cult of Mac For several years in a row, the iPhone has been one of the most popular cameras in the world. Apple ...
The default camera app on Apple’s iPhone is actually quite good. It has an intuitive interphase, as well as a surprising amount features and manual controls. You can easily switch between lenses — ...
Cameras on smartphones are a much bigger deal than they used to be. Smartphone companies are chomping to make their cameras more reliable, adapt to dim light better, and add extra features to engage ...
Anurag's interest in technology was sparked around 15 years ago when he first tried a Nokia smartphone, one of those Windows-powered devices. Having only used feature phones up until then, he was ...
Today, Lux released an update to Halide, its manual control camera app. The marquee feature is Process Zero, a mode that allows photographers to take images with no algorithmic or AI processing. As ...
Set separate focus and exposure points, and get more visual feedback Set separate focus and exposure points, and get more visual feedback is a reporter with five years of experience covering consumer ...
The whole smartphone ecosystem is evolving around the camera lenses. Especially, the ability to capture stunning photos even in a low-light environment is a new trend in the smartphone industry.