Ultra Wide
Camera in Action
When using the iPhone in
regular mode, the image now
sits under the tools as well
as in the picture area. This
shows what you’d add by
switching to the Ultra Wide
camera, which you do with
the scroll wheel as seen here.
Deep Fusion
This one isn’t yet ready, but it
should appear with a software
update later this autumn. Using
the neural engine of the A13 Bionic
chip, Deep Fusion shoots nine
images in quick succession, and,
in one second, the neural engine
analyses the fused combination of
their long and short exposures to
build the final image, pixel by pixel.
The result is an incredible level of
detail, and very low noise.
Night Mode
Another new camera feature is Night Mode. This activates automatically when light is low
enough for it to make a difference. According to Apple’s Senior Director, Product Marketing
(iPhone) Kaiann Drance, “We determine the image fusion time and use adaptive bracketing
based on what we see in preview. So, shorter frames if you have subject motion or longer
frames if you have deep shadows, then we intelligently fuse images together, reducing motion
and blur.”
This is one key area where Apple previously lagged behind its rivals such as Samsung,
Google and Huawei, so it’s great to see the feature implemented in the iPhone 11 Pro/Pro Max.
Two shots taken from the same place at the same
time, with and without Night Mode active.
An image like this would be impossible on any
previous iPhone.
All these beautiful
photos were taken on
an iPhone 11 Pro.
AppleUserMAGAZINE
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