Oxygenos Camera Apk

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Vespasiano Jilg

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Aug 3, 2024, 5:24:24 PM8/3/24
to chiochanrairo

I got a new phone, a Xiaomi 13T, and now have an issue scanning business cards with the Hubspot app. I can't get the camera to focus on the card. It actually looks like the resolution is very low. I don't have problems with other scanning apps and also the QR scanner works fine. I just tried again on my old phone, a Samsung S21, and don't have any issue there.

The Hasselblad camera is a big leap forward for OnePlus. Other parts of the OnePlus 9 Pro are a regression that feels like the brand is becoming Samsung and doing too many things at the expense of core features.

Now that you know what it means to be a Samsung phone, you know the OnePlus 9 Pro is equal parts impressive and disappointing. That is the burden of succeeding the OnePlus 8 Pro, the best Android phone of 2020 with one of the most consistent and reliable camera systems.

With the OnePlus 9 series, OnePlus called in some help from Swedish photography experts Hasselblad. Earlier this month OnePlus announced a $150 million investment in developing camera technologies across the board for its future phones, one of which involves a three-year deal with Hasselblad to lend its expertise.

Before I shut up and get to the comparisons, I do want to shout out the Hasselblad integration. The camera app has been redesigned with Hasselblad heritage in mind. Little things like the squash-colored shutter button and a new shutter sound ripped from a Hasselblad camera are nice touches. The laser autofocus and PDAF are also wicked fast with no hunting like the ill-fated S20 Ultra.

I use dropbox to sync up my files from my computer to my mobile devices (iphone and iPad). When I tried this morning to save my files to my phone, I discovered that the "Export"-button was missing and had been replaced by a share button (profile with a plus sign next to it). So my question is: How do I download my files (images in this case) to my camera roll on my phone?

Thanks a lot, Rich....I spent some time to find the answer. And here it is. However, I suppose things could be easier. It's just too complicated for the user to 1) open the pic 2) click "Share Via" 3) Save image. Not to mention that you have to do it one pic after another....Guess lots of folks use Dropbox to sync the files(esp. photos) between laptop and photos as I do...I do believe it's very important to keep it simple for the users to export the pic from Dropbox to phones.

My use case is wanting to send files (usually pictures but other files as well) to people in text or email. I should be able to save a file to the local device (which is a Dropbox option) and then send that file directly in a text or email, not a link, without having to save it to my camera roll.

I have finally found a solution after searching the web and coming up empty. I have the Galaxy S7 edge and needed a couple of pics in my gallery from Dropbox. It may seem a bit complicated but with a bit of practice becomes easier to do.

First open Dropbox on your pc and find the pics you want to move. Copy and paste these pics to your desktop. (Don't just move them or they'll only be on your desktop and not in Dropbox anymore.) Next, connect your phone via USB to your pc, click to allow your pc to talk to your phone, (a little pop up window on your phone). Open the files on your phone and find where your pics are stored (device or sd card) and the folder is usually called DCIM. Then select all the pics on your desktop and drag and drop them to the folder in your phone. Disconnect the USB from your pc and you're finished.

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Despite packing some really nice camera specs, the OnePlus 3 and 3T don't take the best pictures. That's because, these days, great software is just as important as great hardware when it comes to image quality.

Qualcomm, who made the processors for the OnePlus 3 and 3T, has a terrific camera app called Snapdragon Camera. It was created specifically for devices that use Qualcomm's image signal processor, so it can tie hardware and software together in a way that results in better photos all around on supported phones.

But the Snapdragon Camera isn't officially available for OnePlus devices. To fix this, developer nvertigo67 has ported Qualcomm's camera app to work on the OnePlus 3 and 3T. Bottom line, this mod fixes grainy images, improves focus accuracy, and has just about as many features as the stock OxygenOS camera.

Next, reboot to TWRP by holding down the power button and selecting reboot, then tapping on "Recovery." Once you've rebooted to TWRP, it's always smart to create a NANDroid backup first. This way, you'll be protected in case something goes wrong while flashing the ZIP.

After you've created your NANDroid, go back to the TWRP main menu and press the "Install" button. Navigate to your Downloads folder, and select the previously downloaded ZIP. Then, slide the bottom bar to confirm the flash and begin the Snapdragon Camera installation. Tap "Reboot system" when it's done installing to wrap things up.

Before you can use the Snapdragon Camera, you'll have to grant a couple of permissions so that the app is able to access the hardware and software it needs to function. To do so, head to the Apps menu in Settings, then select "Snapdragon Camera." Next, tap "App Permissions," then grant at least the "Camera," "Microphone," and "Storage" permissions.

You can also grant the "Location" permission if you want to geotag your shots. The "Contacts" permission is there if you would like to share your photographs after taking them, but both of these permissions are optional.

After you're done granting permissions, go ahead and try out the Snapdragon Camera. Be sure to look at the welcome screen to learn where everything is. Take a shot or two and you'll immediately notice that the picture quality is better overall and a lot less grainy. Not only that, the Snapdragon camera takes shots with a better aspect ratio and captures a lot more detail with vividly true colors.

To top it all off, the Snapdragon Camera also has over a dozen finely tuned modes covering all possible moments and situations. There's more than enough filters to make everyone happy, and the Settings menu gives you a decent amount of options to play around with (a lot more than on the Oxygen OS Camera).

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I'm looking for a way to open a simple application, just to take a picture and store it, but as I've seen other topics, the problem appears as ''application missing, please manually enter the information''..
could someone please help me?
as the only thing I need is to open the app and take the photo through it, there are no other parameters, so I just put its destination in the 'appearance' column.
Could someone enlighten me what I did wrong?
Supervis-o.xlsx (21.2 KB)
logotimestamp1167331 38.4 KB

If you are using Android 11+, I don't think there's a good way to do what you need. You can use an appearance of ex:com.jeyluta.timestampcamerafree() to launch Timestamp Camera, but the app doesn't know how to return an image directly to Collect.

I am very happy if I can do this, in my project I necessarily need to use this application from an external source to validate the data, it brings the geolocation information, date and time and location directly on the photo. this would be very important to me, thank you very much, I look forward to getting back to you as soon as possible.

What Android version are you using? Are you sure you have the free version installed from =com.jeyluta.timestampcamerafree? If you have one of the paid versions you have to make sure to use the corresponding app id.

The app developer did get back to me with a very helpful message! We need to do some design and exploration around what he suggests and will try to have a solution for Collect 2023.4 in September or so. What we would like to try to do is provide a way to specify in the form the app ID of an alternate camera app.

this would really be very useful.
I'm using android 12 and 11, I tested it on two smartphones and both didn't work, I'm using the free version of the TimeStamp app..
this would be great because I would also like to use the camera with an application to scan documents "CamScaner" it would also be perfect for my work, if you can include this function it would also be great.

or, I think it might help for now if I can collect the photo taken by OdkCollect and assign a response collected in text to the image, like tag image but this option just gives me the possibility to scratch or draw on the image, if you could paste a text of the questions in the image it would help

Trax Cam is not yet intended as a product for ordinary users. Rather, the purpose of this project, at least initially, is as a learning exercise for me. The status of it, at the time of writing, is it is stable, being based on a stable version of Open Camera, and I am running it as my main camera app on two different phones, but I am not committing to making further fixes or updates. I might or might not continue developing or updating it. Switching to other projects will give me a broader and probably more useful learning experience.

It was while evaluating /e/ that I noticed again several of the shortcomings of OpenCamera, and decided it could be time for me to do something about it. I had some ideas noted in my head, and have now written them down in a bug tracker.

In my opinion, one thing /e/ could do to encourage volunteer developers to develop OpenCamera (or another) in a useful direction for /e/ and other libre Android uses, would be to publish a road map or a prioritization of issues for what they consider needs to be done. I feel that projects providing a summary of what they want done is often missing and often a surprisingly effective driver in open source development. Developers tend to be quicker and more efficient at implementing something that is at least loosely specified (along with rationale to explain why) than creating something that they need to invent from scratch.

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