Cameras

Microsoft tries building a smarter iPhone camera app in Pix

image
Comments (22)
  1. Ms. Adelle Harvey V says:

    I checked the Microsoft app store and found this is only for iPhones. I think the native camera app already does this with a lens called blink so that’s why it’s not available.

    The one thing I love about my Lumia phone over my iPhone is all of the 3rd party camera apps are linked inside of the native app so you only need to open the camera app to add effects. With iPhones you have the native app and then you have to make a separate folder for all of the rest or you will be searching for them

  2. Terrance Rau says:

    @CraigAF 

    That’s always been my favourite feature of Windows Phone. The integration of apps as part of the system, not completely separate parts of an app launcher platform.

  3. Clay Heidenreich says:

    I’ll likely give this a try, but pretty much everything announced as “new” already exists in the built in iPhone camera app.  Computational photography and HDR are already built in… perhaps not used in the sample picture above.  Better yet, Apple does this on the ISP, so the results are instantaneous.

    Also, I remember when the iPhone 5s came out, it was already doing techniques like taking multiple exposures and automatically selecting the best one every time you press the shutter.

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/7329/some-thoughts-about-the-iphone-5s-camera-improvements

  4. donny.schneider says:

    Oh… just like Lenses Blink

  5. jjenkins says:

    Love or hate the Lumia line, the cameras were always top in class.  It appears they are taking some of the processing and making an ios app.  The app osn’t going to make the iPhone camera sensor better but it will get more out of it than the basic camera app.

  6. keegan06 says:

    I like the idea, and it’s probably great for portraits. But the delays associated with the extra processing could be cumbersome when you need to take pictures quickly quickly (kids, sports, etc).

    I’ll still give it a shot, and just try to work with the limitations.

  7. Wilburn Reinger MD says:

    @SDarrin 

    Yeah, all the processing is catered for on Windows Phone with killer camera image processing hardware.

    The Nokia purchase was worth it for the PureView platform alone! (If only they could actually sell any phones)

  8. zoila72 says:

    Sounds like it’s worth a try.

  9. Prof. Valentine Luettgen III says:

    I checked the Microsoft app store and found this is only for iPhones. I think the native camera app already does this with a lens called blink so that’s why it’s not available.

    The one thing I love about my Lumia phone over my iPhone is all of the 3rd party camera apps are linked inside of the native app so you only need to open the camera app to add effects. With iPhones you have the native app and then you have to make a separate folder for all of the rest or you will be searching for them

  10. Prof. Samanta Morissette says:

    @CraigAF 

    That’s always been my favourite feature of Windows Phone. The integration of apps as part of the system, not completely separate parts of an app launcher platform.

  11. Alek Rath says:

    I’ll likely give this a try, but pretty much everything announced as “new” already exists in the built in iPhone camera app.  Computational photography and HDR are already built in… perhaps not used in the sample picture above.  Better yet, Apple does this on the ISP, so the results are instantaneous.

    Also, I remember when the iPhone 5s came out, it was already doing techniques like taking multiple exposures and automatically selecting the best one every time you press the shutter.

    http://www.anandtech.com/show/7329/some-thoughts-about-the-iphone-5s-camera-improvements

  12. Leonardo Stamm says:

    Okay, I’ve downloaded the app and have taken a range of pictures. The image in this article is deceptive.  If you turn on HDR, you get essentially the same image quality on the built in app.  Where this app adds an advantage is if you are taking pictures of people.  It does a good job of helping you miss the eye blinking, etc.   That’s a nice feature that is better than the built in app.  However, in terms of overall image quality, I’ve not seen any actual benefit in practice.  This app essentially just has HDR on all the time.

  13. Karley Gutkowski says:

    @Steve__S  I did what you did in an office space with 5 people sitting around the table. I then projected the 6 pictures on a 60 inch flat screen TV, in the same conference room. Of the six pictures the best one chosen by everyone was the PIX, the second best was a PIX chosen by 4 of the 5, the next best was the native Apple, and the next was the PIX.

    None of them knew which was taken by the PIX or native app with HDR. All were taken on a iPhone 6. the phone was not mine but I did take the pictures.

    Don’t be blinded by the Apple logo try a test like that yourself then comment.

  14. Prof. Sheridan Veum says:

    @nutjob

    LOL… the moment you go to your 60″ flat screen, you’re already losing quality as compared to your phone.  Again, having run my own tests, there was no noticeable difference in quality.  The Pix images were different than the standard images, but when I forced the HDR on, the images were essentially the same.  You can’t tell me that I’m seeing a quality difference that doesn’t exist.  Again, the only benefit I’ve found so far is that the Pix images do a good job of missing people blink.

  15. Ara D'Amore says:

    @Steve__S

    Your reply made me laugh. It
    showed a lot about you and not in a good light.

    1. You do not know how
    graphics work if you think (pixel count is all that matters)

    “the moment you go to
    your 60″ flat screen, you’re already losing quality as compared to your
    phone.”

    2. Not understanding how
    your tests versus independent test are done.

    3. You already have your
    mind made up when you say things like

    “You can’t tell me that
    I’m seeing a quality difference that doesn’t exist”

    4. Thinking your experiences
    are the ones everyone are having is the most tragic and show you to be
    extremely self-involved.

    I am willing to bet you
    aremale between the ages of 16 and 36
    who think they know about technology from reading a couple of websites and
    taking one or two classes.

    Your post just reinforces
    how much knowledge you lack.

    Frankly, I am moving on and
    I hope no one takes your posts seriously.

    You want and need it, so you get the last word. Have a nice life.

  16. hildegard.kunde says:

    Oh… just like Lenses Blink

  17. yundt.malika says:

    Love or hate the Lumia line, the cameras were always top in class.  It appears they are taking some of the processing and making an ios app.  The app osn’t going to make the iPhone camera sensor better but it will get more out of it than the basic camera app.

  18. triston.bradtke says:

    I like the idea, and it’s probably great for portraits. But the delays associated with the extra processing could be cumbersome when you need to take pictures quickly quickly (kids, sports, etc).

    I’ll still give it a shot, and just try to work with the limitations.

  19. okunde says:

    @SDarrin 

    Yeah, all the processing is catered for on Windows Phone with killer camera image processing hardware.

    The Nokia purchase was worth it for the PureView platform alone! (If only they could actually sell any phones)

  20. Iva Zemlak says:

    @Amusal

    LOL… no.  For starters, there is nothing magic about PureView.  That’s just Nokia’s or now Microsoft’s branding for their post processing tech.  Even with that, Nokia had put out phones with nice hardware (large sensors, OIS, etc.), but their post processing was less than desirable.  Specifically, Pureview devices have a history of poor handling of white balance, etc.   That said, no, this tech is not worth billions… not even close.

  21. Janelle Bogisich says:

    Sounds like it’s worth a try.

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