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This post applies to the Project Indigo iOS camera app.
Adobe Labs is excited to share an early look at Project Indigo, an iPhone camera app we've started to develop, to get feedback from the photography community. The app offers full manual controls, a more natural ("SLR-like") look, and high image quality in both JPEG and raw formats. It also introduces some new photographic experiences not available in other camera apps. For more information on the underlying technology, please refer to this Project Indigo blog post.
Before you start with Project Indigo
Recipes for success when using Project Indigo
To get the maximum out of your images captured with the app, follow these guidelines:
Sending feedback
Please try the app and share feedback in this community forum thread. If you report a problem you encountered, it would help to include details like which device you are running Project Indigo on, what kind of scene you were trying to capture, what you were trying to achieve with the camera, and as much information as possible about what you like or do not like about the resulting photo quality. Our team will continually monitor this thread to track issues and improve future experiences.
To improve the performance and results of Project Indigo, it is important that examples of images that do not meet your expectations are forwarded to the team via your report. A large variety of file formats are allowed as attachments in these forum posts. The best option is to attach your image's raw file directly to your feedback post. Note that there is a 50 MB limit on an attachment's file size. If your raw file is too large to attach, the best option is to share the file via a file-sharing service (Dropbox or similar) and then share the link in your feedback post. Thank you for continuing to provide feedback on the Project Indigo camera!
Boris Ajdin: Product Manager, NextCam
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Agree, but... we also need to keep in mind that this is indeed a 'project' in public beta. I applaud the Pi team for taking this route. Very unlike Adobe, in a very good way!
I have shot some images with Pi - with the 15 Pro - that are so good it's hard to believe they're from an iPhone. I think Pi is really (becoming) something special. Low ISO settings with shutterspeeds in (low) light conditions that are like... HOW?!? 🙂
I'm sure the Pi team has a clear goal on how the tone & colour rendering should look. Personally I hope it will not lean towards pretty postcards too much but more towards real life accuracy. I love the Indigo project!
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Well that's the thing, anything in release phase to public, even say alpha, the team MUST take every single consideration and inputs from us "testers" including phlethoras of samples and go back to the drawing board. I tune google camera mods for multiple devices so I know all about taking inputs from my users, and I'm a one man show vs the very capable small team that Indigo has. What's troubling is average consumer still and will always prefer heavy denoising (smearing) over fine grains processing like in the dng when you kill all denoise. That's why most OEM now uses AI cartoon hallucinations especially at 10x zooms and beyond even with big sensors. For example, look at the Vivo X300 Pro, and the recently shown Honor Magic 8 Pro samples from gsmarena lol. Indigo's raw is great, but it's just annoying to have to process EVERY pics, on top of that edit the SDR base so sites like facebook, and telegram has non-hdr viewer to support them or else it will look oversharpened, over shadow lift/haze.
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