iPad & iPhone User - UK (2019-09)

(Antfer) #1

APPLE SPECIAL EVENT


To fix that issue, you do exactly what you’d expect


  • open the image in the Photos app and tap Edit, then
    select the Crop tool. You’ll discover that there’s more
    image beyond the crop marks. This is image data from
    the ultra wide camera that has been seamlessly stitched
    into your photo or video, and if you want to use it, you
    can just change the crop to reveal more information.
    It’s a very clever way to provide a safety net via the
    ultra wide camera.Once you’vetappedthat Edit button,
    that extra off‑camera information will continue to be
    available for later tweaking – iOS won’t throw it away.


The mysteries of Night Mode
Ever since Google introduced its Night Mode, a feature
for Pixel phones that uses multiple exposures, including
long exposures, and a whole lot of image processing to
create vibrant, bright scenes out of locations with very
little light, Apple’s grainy, realistic approach to shooting
images in dark locations has seemed out of step. With
the iPhone 11, Apple finally gets in the game.
In the Camera app, when you are attempting to take
a picture in a dark scene, a Night Mode indicator will
appear automatically – you don’t have to do anything.
The yellowNight Modeindicatorwill display,next to
a crescent‑moon icon, the amount of time you’ll need
to hold your phone still to get a long exposure. That
exposure time will also be displayed down by the
shutter icon. Tap and hold the camera still, and the
iPhone will collect not just one image but numerous
ones, process them, apply Apple’s own brand of image
processing magic, and generate a photo that looks like
it was taken in a much brighter environment.
Free download pdf