![]() ![]() Features are now labeled properly, taking out most of the guesswork. This Camera app will remind you to rotate the device when you try to capture a video in vertical mode.īetter Interface – Did the previous Camera app frustrate you with its interface? Fret no more. ![]() Google Says No To Vertical Video – Don’t you hate it when you take a video that ends up in the wrong orientation? Unlike photos, videos can’t be rotated just as easily. Improved Panaroma – The newly improved Panaroma mode, allows you to capture the full width of a scene in higher detail. There are a few other minor tweaks to some of the other features, namely: There’s more, the new Photo Sphere can now capture up to 50 megapixels, providing more details in your photo sphere picture. How far can you go with this? A full 360 degrees! Shift your camera to align with the dots and the app will help you stitch the images together. These dots are there to help you focus your device camera to create the perfect Photo Sphere. The moment you fire up Photo Sphere, you will notice 4 dots on the four sides, left, ride, up and down, after you make a snapshot. It’s far from a new feature but you’ll definitely love playing around with it once you get the hang of it. This one is an app that will give the panorama mode a run for its money. That will happen as long as the camera can tell the difference between your subject and the background. The blur level will only focus on blurring the blackground, not the subject. You can adjust the blur level after you have captured the shot. The app will help guide you through the process with on-screen instructions. In Lens Blur mode, you just have to shoot the subject, then slowly raise the device while keeping the subject in the center of the frame. This is a common feature found on Single-Lens Reflex (SLR/DLSR) cameras, and it’s now available via this app. Lens Blur is finally here, a feature that allows your device camera to focus on a target while having the background blurred out. Let’s check out what this app has to offer. Most of the app functions as a typical in-built camera app but what distinguishes this new revamped app from the previous version is the updated Photo Sphere and the new Lens Blur function. The previous stock Camera was found wanting both in design and functionality, so this new Camera app is definitely a long-awaited improvement. Recommended Reading: Top 20 Android Photography Apps New & Upgraded Features You can run it on any Android device running KitKat 4.4 and above. And better yet the official Google Camera app is no longer confined to Nexus and GPE (Google Play Experience) devices only. It’s better, sleekier and has a few pretty cool feaures you would want to try out, like Lens Blur and Photo Sphere. If you cannot download the app via Play Store, download the APK file directly here. But now, Android users may want to reconsider trying out the new and improved Google camera app, just released in the Play Store. Many of us opt for third-party camera apps because they are more solidly built than what the stock apps have to offer. There’s also a switch for saving flat spheres to your Camera Roll, only uploading spheres to Google via Wi-Fi, and setting the resolution of the finished photo.For any smartphone user, no matter which mobile OS you are on, the camera app is one of the more oft-used apps. The app also offers a simple settings section that lets you turn off geotagging of photo spheres altogether, though you won’t be able to publish them to the Web until you set a custom location. For those who would prefer that the location of their sphere be a little abstracted (say, if you don’t want to have a location from your house published on the internet), you can tap the map below your finished sphere to edit the location. There’s no option to publish anonymous spheres-you have to link both your Google+ account and your location data. The flat version of the sphere is automatically saved to your Camera Roll, but to share the actual curved scene, you need to publish it to Google Maps. You can save your finished photo spheres as flat images to your camera roll. You can view your new photo by scrolling around or by tapping the compass button to use the accelerometer to turn your device around the scene. When it’s done, you can preview your new, (mostly) seamlessly-stitched sphere. A single Street View meeple appears during the loading screen, meticulously hanging and straightening white squares in a line. When you finish a photo sphere, Google turns to processing. ![]()
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