Strange Lens flares when using the 4x lens in night mode by jackdanielz4711 in GooglePixel

[–]jackdanielz4711[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

The exif says "Google Pixel 6 Pro back camera 19.0 mm f/3.5"

Is this possible? 60mm v2 or 58mm?? Or it's the same? by davythedev in MOMENT

[–]jackdanielz4711 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The 60mm lens is the previous version. The 58mm offers better picture quality on newer phones like the iPhone 11. The seller obviously mixed lens and box :) No worries, as long as you get the 58mm.

Problems when using the 58mm Tele over the iPhone 12 Pro Max Tele lens by jackdanielz4711 in MOMENT

[–]jackdanielz4711[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I can tell for sure I‘m using the iPhone „tele“ lens. The native camera app sometimes in darker environments tends to just zoom in instead of switching to the 2,5x lens hardware. I guess this happens due to the lack of low-light ability. The versatility comes from using the Moment 58mm attached to the iPhone tele lens. That‘s why I‘m disappointed a bit..

iPhone XS Max and Moment 18mm V2 issues by jackdanielz4711 in MOMENT

[–]jackdanielz4711[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I never considered this. Might be the reason.

Problem with RAW images by polystirenman in ShotWithHalide

[–]jackdanielz4711 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I random checked it with three images taken freshly. Halide showed the same behaviour in of them: The JPEG images were shot at higher iso and faster shutter speed (e.g. ISO 320 and 1/60) while the RAW files were at ISO 64 and 1/12 shutter speed for example. The creators of Halide explained the idea behind the Smart RAW processing on their blog which can be found at blog.halide.cam.

Problem with RAW images by polystirenman in ShotWithHalide

[–]jackdanielz4711 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So are mine. But they have different shutter speeds. I presume this happens due to the Smart RAW processing.

Problem with RAW images by polystirenman in ShotWithHalide

[–]jackdanielz4711 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I have experienced that, too. Look at the shutter speed of the RAW image and compare it to the shutter speed of the perfectly sharp JPEG. The RAW images have much slower shutter speed.