Apple's iOS 8 Camera app brings new shooting modes, developers given keys to manual contro...

Posted:
in iPhone edited September 2019
Among the numerous improvements and additions Apple is brining to iOS 8 are a slew of new camera modes and settings including timers, focus and exposure settings, as well as developer access to manual controls.



When Apple ships iOS 8 to the public in the fall, the company will bring a host of new features to its first-party Camera app by applying software tweaks that leverage existing iPhone and iPad hardware.

On the user-facing end, iOS 8's Camera brings notable additions like a timer and separate controls for focus and exposure. As seen in the screenshot below, the timer comes with basic three-second and ten-second delays, along with an off mode.



With iOS 8, users will also be able to independently control focus and exposure via onscreen taps. Currently, iOS 7 goes as far as an AF/AE lock, though third-party apps like Camera+ have boasted such functionality for some time.

A new time-lapse mode does what it says on the box, letting users create a video composed of snapshots taken at predetermined time intervals. Swiping left to "Time-Lapse," users press the record button and let the iPhone run for a desired period. Once a set is complete, the individual photos are stitched together and played back at a higher frame rate than what was captured.

As for iPad owners, one major addition will be a panorama mode, something that has been missing since the feature first debuted in iOS 7.



The bigger news for iOS 8 comes on the developer side, where Apple has granted full access to camera controls including ISO, aperture, shutter speed and more. Third-party app makers will for the first time be able to create camera apps that reach beyond the highly automated and constrained implementations previously offered by Apple.

Another big feature coming to iOS 8 is PhotoKit, which gives developers functional access to pictures saved in Photos and the Camera Roll. Harnessing PhotoKit, developers can provide special photo manipulations like filters and artistic flourishes directly in Photos without forcing users to open a standalone title. Integration is key and with the latest APIs, it looks like Apple is finally folding in assets from outside sources into its first-party software.



Finally, the Camera and Photos backend will be tidied up with iCloud integration so that all photos taken from one iPhone or iPad will be available on all other devices registered under a user's account. Automatic sorting as seen above will be standard, while upload settings are handled in the iOS Settings menu.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 13
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Someone please create an on-screen focus ring for their photo app!
  • Reply 2 of 13
    hmmhmm Posts: 3,405member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by SpamSandwich View Post



    Someone please create an on-screen focus ring for their photo app!



    That is an excellent idea.

  • Reply 3 of 13
    flaneurflaneur Posts: 4,526member
    Time lapse is a great boon to humankind.
  • Reply 4 of 13
    calicali Posts: 3,494member
    It's about damn time. I thought this was what those types of apps were supposed to do, run in the background.

    I remember the first time I visited the app store on my iPod Touch. I downloaded several photo apps and a few font and keyboard apps only to delete them after seeing my home scree filled with a bunch of extra icons. pointless.

    Needless to say, I really hope these apps only run within the respective default app so we won't have extra useless app icons and save screen space.
  • Reply 5 of 13
    jakebjakeb Posts: 562member
    Most excited about the extensions in regards to the camera app. In the demo they showed vsco filters right inside the default camera app.
  • Reply 6 of 13
    lorin schultzlorin schultz Posts: 2,771member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by jakeb View Post



    Most excited about the extensions in regards to the camera app. In the demo they showed vsco filters right inside the default camera app.

     

    Waiting to see if we can FINALLY lock off the white balance. The slight shifts in hue as the camera constantly adjusts to little variations in lighting can ruin an otherwise excellent recording, making it look amateurish and "cheap."

     

    Still, what's surprising is not that I haven't been able to do that, but that I can shoot hi-def video with a phone AT ALL! One that I can carry in my pocket! And it looks pretty decent! I'm constantly blown away by the things we take for granted.

  • Reply 7 of 13
    SpamSandwichSpamSandwich Posts: 33,407member
    Would love to see someone implement pre-programmable rack focus settings which would enable focus-puller functionality, something essential to getting a more pro video/cinematic look.
  • Reply 8 of 13
    dacloodacloo Posts: 890member
    I'll focus on your rack!
    Would love to see someone implement pre-programmable rack focus settings
  • Reply 9 of 13
    jony0jony0 Posts: 378member
    I just wish there would be a setting to take out the SQUARE option, something I will never ever ever use. Even though Instagram has over 100 million users, that's still not a majority, that leaves a lot of people that don't use it. At the very least they could have the option of pushing it beyond PANO, an option I use quite frequently.
  • Reply 10 of 13
    r00fusr00fus Posts: 245member
    Burst Photo management sounds interesting. - except that I like to view the photo on a larger screen to see which one is "best".

    So would this scenario work? Use iCloud Photo Library to share photos between iPhone and Mac, mark the appropriate burst photos as Favorite on Mac using retina/big screen, next sync pushes that burst into the PhotoStream.

    I'd still like to prevent my 300 burst residuals from showing up on my iCloud Library - that'd be a huge mess.
  • Reply 11 of 13
    r00fusr00fus Posts: 245member
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Jony0 View Post



    I just wish there would be a setting to take out the SQUARE option, something I will never ever ever use. Even though Instagram has over 100 million users, that's still not a majority, that leaves a lot of people that don't use it. At the very least they could have the option of pushing it beyond PANO, an option I use quite frequently.

    To be honest, I like that Pano and Video are both far right and left options - sort of makes them easier to naviate to using fitt's law logic.

  • Reply 12 of 13
    gilly33gilly33 Posts: 434member
    All great news.
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