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The Game 161

macrumors Nehalem
Original poster
Dec 15, 2010
31,603
20,847
UK
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Super happy with this
 
Lol I was totally looking at the first pic thinking, “damn this doesn’t look all that impressive”. Then I realized it was the iPhone X after seeing the bottom right wording and scrolling down.

:D
 
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I have seen it mentioned several times that this will automatically enable itself depending on the lighting. Does anyone know if it can be disabled? I can envision a few occasions where despite the low light, I wouldn’t want everything lit up.
 
I have seen it mentioned several times that this will automatically enable itself depending on the lighting. Does anyone know if it can be disabled? I can envision a few occasions where despite the low light, I wouldn’t want everything lit up.

Yes, they said it can't be turned on manually. All you can do is disable it in the camera settings.
 
I have seen it mentioned several times that this will automatically enable itself depending on the lighting. Does anyone know if it can be disabled? I can envision a few occasions where despite the low light, I wouldn’t want everything lit up.

It can’t be turned on, but once it turns on there is a toggle to turn it off. If that makes sense.
 
It can’t be turned on, but once it turns on there is a toggle to turn it off. If that makes sense.
That makes perfect sense thanks. I’d seen where it has to activate itself and I think it was Marques Brownlee who showed by placing his hand over the sensor. But I hadn’t seen mentioned about disabling it. This is good to know.
 
It’s a great improvement. Only question is how bright the scene was in the first place. I really dont like the night mode in google, where you end up with more scene lighting than you perceived while being there.
 
Looks nice (assuming these are legit). I’m not a huge fan of Google’s current implementation. It looks like someone turned a light on and then took the photo. It doesn’t look like what you’re actually seeing.
 
I wonder how this is implemented actually. If the UI controls still allow for tuning down brightness, therefore tuning down the algorithm, this would be perfect.
 
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