![]() This release includes bug fixes, performance improvements and several new features. The Iridient X-Transformer 1.0 beta 4 update is now available for download! Iridient X-Transformer beta 4 is supported on both macOS 10.7 or later and 64-bit editions of Windows 7 or later. You can read about the new release below. Irident X-Transformer 1.0 has been pretty solid since beta 2 and continues to improve. Interestingly, the current version of Iridient Developer (3.1.2) seems to already have a preset for the iPhone 7+ DNG/RAW format.ĭIGLLOYD: good tip! Unclear if there is an option to delete once downloaded.Yesterday Irident released X-Transformer 1.0 Beta 4 and it has a lot of improvements. All the way to the right of the window, if you click on the “kind” column header, it sorts THE ENTIRE CAMERA ROLL by kind. ![]() Still have to load the entire Camera Roll though. You get to select the folder you want to dump the images into. You can download the DNGs using the “Image Capture.app” from Apple. You don't have to screw around with Photos to download the files from Camera Roll. That there are also great manual controls just completes the package.ĭIGLLOYD: many controls, too many sometimes, and awkward compared to a real camera-but that’s the iPhone way. It was chosen because I wanted to practice shooting 3:1 images with a rule of thirds grid overlay on my iPhone 6, and it was the only app I could find that allowed that. The result is better photos more of the time-less degradation from motion blur which is a regular challenge for me when shooting iPhone.Ībout this trout: see An Exceptionally Beautiful Rainbow Trout Unlike Any Other I’ve Seen.į2.2 1/3000 sec, ISO 25 14:54:00 iPhone 6s Plus + iPhone 6s Plus back camera 4.15mm f/2.2 29mm equiv (4.2mm) Jason W writes:īy coincidence I downloaded ProCamera last night. Pro Camera offers a wide range of controls for exposure control as well as a special options for taking the picture when motion is minimized, based on the gyro sensors in the iPhone (rather than just taking the image instantly regardless of movement and hoping optical image stabilization and/or multi-image merge will compensate). And in this case the color is not destroyed by shooting in sRGB as the iPhone Camera App is wont to do. There is, as always with raw, just a lot more flexibility. In particular, shooting in DNG avoids the aggressive JPEG compression and baked-in white balance that the built-in Camera app has. The image quality using DNG is easily superior under many conditions. Of course, Photos is a steaming pile of yuck (it lacks very basic features such as being able to distinguish raw from JPEG without doing Get Info), but you can option-drag to copy the DNGs out of iPhotos into a folder, then have your way with them in Photoshop/ACR or Lightroom. ![]() It’s not quite as convenient as you do have to explicitly export the images to Camera Roll, but once you do, iPhotos downloads all the DNG (and/or JPEG) images from the Camera Roll. I’m shooting more and more with the ProCamera app in raw/DNG on the iPhone 6S Plus (7 Plus still not arrived). SEND FEEDBACK Related: Apple, Apple iOS, Apple iPhone and iPad, fishing, iOS, Jason W, Jon L, Onchorynchus mykiss, raw, trout, wildlife
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