are u ppl able to focus display boards with light in dark light?? using stock camera and xcam?? and also if u take pics of light bulbs or automotive lights...are u getting streaks of light??
Clean the glass good, you wont get streaks no more, basically get grease off
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Hi, I'm just wondering if this is a problem with my phone or if its symptomatic across all DHD's. When taking photos using flash, the photos have a quite visible green hue across it (this is of course, set to no effect). Does anyone else have this issue? Ta
I have not noticed this yet, but in what lighting conditions are you shooting ? if it's in common bulb or fluorescent lighting then it might just be your whitebalance which is off. Adjust and try again, see if you replicate the same greenish hue.
/ Magnus
I tested in a pitch black room and there's definitely a greenish/yellowish hue across the photos. Looking at the LED flash itself i can see there is a yellowish plastic cover which i assume is the cause. Very odd that they would not go for straight clear plastic.
tchi6 said:
I tested in a pitch black room and there's definitely a greenish/yellowish hue across the photos. Looking at the LED flash itself i can see there is a yellowish plastic cover which i assume is the cause. Very odd that they would not go for straight clear plastic.
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I think the yellowish flash module is normal. All the phones I have before with flash have the "yellowish plastic" background..whatever you called it. So I don't think this is causing the problem.
I too get a very yellow pic when using flash
jeffmasson said:
I too get a very yellow pic when using flash
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I have the same problem. Bought two phones at once (myself and wife), one removes the normal, the other photos are very yellow. Terms of shooting the same. Original firmware, the latest.
Did you see what the solution to this problem?
Hi All,
Anyone having issue with a green tint in the centre taken with the camera?
Especially when taking snapshots of paper document. Making the handyscan app unuseable.
Well, at least you're getting a green tint, some users have gotten pink, or blue tints...
It is typical with phone cameras...even the iPhone gets a green/pink tint when taking close-up of documents...
However, a simple post processing correction (even the automated fixes in Photoshop) get rid of it pretty easily.
Handyscan is another useful app for taking pics of documents, and it fixes those tinting issues at the centre of the image.
I always get a pink circle in the middle of my pics.
The camera is the thing that ruins my experience with my LG Optimus 7, it's so awfuly bad. I'm glad to hear that I'm not the only one having issues...
Once in a while I get a green tint, but it`s very rare. I actually find the camera to be quite good. I can take very clear images.
I cleaned the lens with 99% rubbing alcohol, and I get noticeably less tint now...especially no more pink halo at the centre...I don't recommend others doing this though, and it might ruin the plastic parts if you aren't careful, and you need lint-free micro fiber Q-tips...
This phone takes wonderful pictures but at night, I am always getting red eyes on all of my pictures. Is there's Fix to this from stock camera?
Armyrj127 said:
This phone takes wonderful pictures but at night, I am always getting red eyes on all of my pictures. Is there's Fix to this from stock camera?
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Red eye is caused by having the flash be located too close to the lens. The light bounces off of the retina of your subject and back to the lens. A camera with an external flash separates the flash and the lens by 6 inches or more. That makes the angle too great for light to flash off the retina and back in to the lens.
Why I'm telling you this is because no fix will remove the red eye as you take the photo.
There are two options.
1. Remove the red eye with an app after the fact like PicSay.
2. Use a camera app that has "red eye reduction". This fires a "pre-flash" which makes the subject's iris close a bit so they have tiny pupils which makes it more difficult for light to go in to the eye, reflect off of the retina and back out of the small iris to the camera lens. This usually only minimizes the red eye and still need to perform option 1.
Hi
When i zoom the camera to the maximum on a dark surface, i see some pixels playing to white and black on the screen, just like dead pixels on lcd. Did you realize anything like that ?
To test, set the brightness to maximum, put the phone on a table or something, on camera face, set the zoom to the mximum, and see the playing 10-15 pixels on the screen
Is it normal ?
Thx
Sent from my HTC U Ultra using Tapatalk
Sounds like high ISO noise, try using pro mode and setting the ISO to 100.
You might get litres noise.
I wouldn't worry though, it's not like this is under normal shooting conditions. If you weren't zoomed in all the way on a dark surface you wouldn't get the issue.
I'd be more concerned with black pixels when zoomed in fully on a brightly lit white surface.
Some pictures of what you're seeing might help us help you better.
wiccan-two said:
Sounds like high ISO noise, try using pro mode and setting the ISO to 100.
You might get litres noise.
I wouldn't worry though, it's not like this is under normal shooting conditions. If you weren't zoomed in all the way on a dark surface you wouldn't get the issue.
I'd be more concerned with black pixels when zoomed in fully on a brightly lit white surface.
Some pictures of what you're seeing might help us help you better.
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Agreed.. besides OP, how on earth did you discover that... that could be any number of things... as wiccan said, could be ISO, could be laser reflection from the surface, could be phase detection or auto focus error... could be anything...
the only time you should worry about dead pixels is.. if your standard images have white/black squares on them or your LCD has empty pixels.. but other than that.. putting your phjne on a surface, lense down over with the camera on... well that could show anything...
Thanks for the replies. When i zoom on a white surface, there is no dead pixel, that is a good thing. I just wanted to share it, because my old one m8 does not have anything like that and everytime same pixels on the screen flickers. Anyway, trying to joy of using my ultra.
Thx
Sent from my HTC U Ultra using Tapatalk
This is my second week with this unit and it's awesome so far! Took some time for the battery life to get up to par, but got that sorted out and now it's a beast!...like the title suggests though, I do have a question about the ultra wide camera. Can someone try going into a dark room, covering the camera lens when the ultra wide camera is activated, and see if you notice light bleed on the view finder when in 3:4 aspect ratio and no filter on? I notice slight light leakage onto the screen if you look around the edges of the viewfinder. You don't have to cover the lens because it is noticeable in really low indoor light conditions or if the room is extremely dark. The other two lens under the same conditions seem fine. It's not a deal breaker or anything, nor will I return the phone, just wondering if anyone else notice. It's very slight. In decent to good light conditions, you don't notice it at all. And I will say that it doesn't show on pics at all. This is just my OCD kicking in lol. The cameras are actually the best I've used on a phone!
I decided to take a screen shot. Take a look at the upper left hand side. Do you see the light leak? With the other camera lens, the viewfinder is pitch black to match the pitch black scene. If indoors and the light conditions are bad, you'll see the distortion on the viewfinder, but the pic will turn out perfect. Only if you do motion picture do you see it a bit. Anyone have this or an explanation? Definitely not enough for me to return the device, but just wondering if it's normal? Zoom into the photo I attached and you'll see it at the top left.
No one can quickly try this and confirm?
Do you have a camera protector applied?
NickosD said:
Do you have a camera protector applied?
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No, no protector applied. When I called Samsung, the rep told me it's normal and her unit does the same. I still don't know. But if you tested in a dark room and you don't get it, that means not every unit has it.