Camera Iphone 8 Plus Download

0 views
Skip to first unread message

John Cortez

unread,
Jan 24, 2024, 11:32:02 PM1/24/24
to dictlinkvedood

iPhone 6 plus rear camera is not focusing, won't remain stable and is blurry no matter how still I get whether video or picture. Automatic or manual focus not working either. Front facing camera works fine. Seems OIS isn't doing anything but making it worse.

Hello, I was also experiencing this problem and I think that I may have found a solution. While trying to figure out what was wrong, I came here and saw something about the camera lens making a vibrating sound while in any app that had a camera pulled up. I happened to hear this and was figuring out what was wrong. Upon closer inspection of my camera lens, I noticed that my camera wasn't in the correct space. It was to the right of the ring about 1mm. I hit my phone against my wrist in the opposite direction of where the camera was more to and check back in the camera app. To my surprise, my camera was working just fine now. I hope you found the helpful.

camera iphone 8 plus download


Download · https://t.co/ualqBg3Iml



That said, the replacement cameras are inexpensive and a quality tech can replace it for you without a problem. It's certainly easier than repairing an iPad, and you'll have a fully functional phone once again! Good luck.

I've been having a continuous battle with this issue. I got my 6 Plus back in September of 2016, on lease from Sprint. I got it and two weeks later Sprint decided to discontinue the 6 Plus from their lineup. I love the phone and had no issues until around the beginning of November 2016 when the camera started having these same symptoms. After doing some reading (in this thread), I called my carrier, they said contacting Apple would be my best bet. I did, and the folks at the Genius Bar fixed it up. About a month later at Christmas time, the camera starts acting up again. I wait to make a repair appointment and talk to Sprint. They tell me again, take it to Apple. I take it to them and they find it odd and go ahead and replace the entire phone with another one. This solves the issue for about three weeks. Symptoms arise again and I call Apple. They seem confused over the phone so I make another appointment. They replace the camera (now in a new device having the same problems) and I take it back with no problem. This was 3 weeks or so ago (it's just now May 4th 2017) and I am experiencing the same phone malfunctions AGAIN! Not very happy with the product I jumped for. I left a cheaper prepaid plan with a fully functioning Android device to "upgrade" to the iPhone, with which I'm having highly unexpected hardware issues.

Hello , I have been having the same problem with my iPhone , with its back camera not focusing and being wobbly as well, and when you try taking a picture with the back camera you can listen to a little sound . Do I go to the Apple Store to get it fixed or a replacement ?

* To identify your iPhone model number, see For details on LTE support, contact your carrier and see www.apple.com/iphone/LTE. Cellular technology support is based on iPhone model number and configuration for either CDMA or GSM networks.

*To identify your iPhone model number, see For details on LTE support, contact your carrier and see www.apple.com/iphone/LTE.
iPhone 6 may ship with iOS 8. iOS 9 will be available as a free download beginning September 16.

The dual camera design is similar to the Huawei usage with one sensor being the RGB, while the secondary is just a monochrome one. It uses the Samsung ISOCELL technology and with the ultra slim sensor with thickness just 5mm it should also be able to deliver some clearer night shots and good effect.

The iPhone 14 Plus has three cameras, just like the iPhone 13 and iPhone 14. There are two at the back - a 12MP wide-angle primary and a 12MP ultrawide-angle secondary. There is also a 12MP front camera for selfies. And while it seems that nothing has changed since the iPhone 12 and iPhone 13, the primary and the selfie cameras have been upgraded.

The primary 12MP camera has been lifted from the iPhone 13 Pro. This means it now has a larger sensor when compared to the iPhone 13's, with larger 1.9µm pixels and a brighter f/1.5 aperture for the 26mm lens. This camera relies on sensor-shift stabilization.

Then there is the 12MP ultrawide camera, with its 120-degree field of view and f/2.4 aperture. It seems to be identical to the ultrawide on the vanilla iPhone 12 and iPhone 13, so we expect similar performance.

The 12MP selfie camera is arguably the biggest improvement to the camera setup on the vanilla iPhone because of the addition of phase detection autofocus and what seems to be optical image stabilization. The 23mm lens has been improved with a new brighter f/1.9 aperture.

The viewfinder has been mostly the same since the iOS 13 and the iPhone 11 - you can see outside of the viewfinder thanks to the precise calibration of the three cameras that allows seeing what will be left outside of the frame in real-time.

Finally, there is also Action mode, which is intended to be used with the ultrawide camera at 2.8K@60fps, though you can use any rear camera and any resolution and frame rate. It heavily crops from the 4K stabilized footage to mimic an action camera output.

The photos we took with the 12MP primary camera on the iPhone 14 Plus are similar to what we got from the iPhone 14 Pro, as well as all iPhones since iPhone 11 or so. There is plenty of resolved detail, no noise, accurate white balance and color presentation, and high contrast.

The dynamic range across all scenes is good, but not over the top as Apple's camera tends to produce high-contrast photos. This means there will be clipped highlights or underdeveloped shadows, but these are arguably more true-to-life.

The ultrawide photos are impressively wide with proficient distortion correction. Their resolved detail is great for such a camera and lens, and the noise is kept tolerably low. The processing is similar to the primary camera - accurate colors even if a bit unexciting, high contrast, and adequate but not excessive dynamic range. The noise is kept low, too.

The main camera on the iPhone 14 Plus takes excellent photos with the help of the Auto Night Mode, which usually chooses 1s exposure. The photos are well-exposed, incredibly detailed, clean of noise, and with superb color saturation. Their contrast is high, just like in the daylight photos, and the dynamic range is reasonable though clipped highlights and underexposed shadows are present.

The 12MP shots taken with the ultrawide camera with Auto Night Mode are usable. The exposure is good, and so is the dynamic range, while the color saturation is great. But all photos are soft and noisy, which makes them usable but nothing special, really.

This last bunch of photos was taken with the ultrawide camera but without Night Mode. They are quite bad - soft, smeared and noisy, with low detail, low dynamic range, and desaturated colors. You can barely see what's on them.

The selfie camera on the iPhone 14 quartet has seen a massive upgrade over the iPhone 13 one - it now supports autofocus and comes with a brighter f/1.9 aperture lens. Its sensor size and the lens field of view remained the same, though.

The selfie photos are great, too. The front camera gets assistance from the structured-light 3D scanner. Thanks to the detailed depth map, the subject separation and the defocused background are among the best you can see on a selfie today. The photo quality is a match to the regular selfie photos - very good, but not the best, as the processing is inadequate at times.

Just like before, these portraits are shot in 7MP, meaning the camera crops a part of its available FoV and shows a zoomed-in shot. There is no option to shoot 23mm 12MP selfie portraits, unfortunately.

The iPhone 14 Plus can record video at up to 4K60 with all of its three cameras. 4K24 is also available across the board if you're after a more cinematic motion look. All videos are digitally (all three cams) stabilized and optically (all but ultrawide) - Apple calls this cinematic video stabilization. All modes, including the 4K60, feature expanded dynamic range thanks to the Smart HDR. The slow-mo options max out at 1080p at 240fps.

There is one new mode called Action mode. It's been on many other phones for years, and it is intended to be shot at the ultrawide camera at 60fps. It crops heavily from the 4K footage (that's why the resolution is 2K) and delivers super smooth and incredibly stabilized video. It is available to all rear cameras and can be shot at any resolution and frame rate, but, as we pointed out, its main hardware is the ultrawide camera at 2K@60fps.

The main camera captures class-leading 4K30 videos with a ton of resolved detail and natural rendition without any traces of over-sharpening. The footage is clean of noise, the dynamic range is great, and so is the contrast.

The low-light videos from the main camera are also great, with plenty of resolved detail and natural-looking sharpness. The exposure is good, and the noise is nicely low. We liked the lively color saturation and the higher-than-average contrast, while the dynamic range keeps the footage looking realistic.

The 4K low-light videos from the ultrawide camera are usable as they offer good enough exposure and color presentation. The detail is a bit low, though, and there is visible noise. The videos are rather dark but still usable.

Finally, the 4K videos from the improved selfie camera are superb. There is naturally defocused background thanks to the new f/1.9 aperture lens, and the autofocus capabilities, of course. The subject is sharp and well exposed, the colors are superb, and so is the contrast. The dynamic range is quite natural-looking, too.

In the same forum, someone suggested the simple fix of putting a magnet next to the camera lens. I tried it, and it worked! It led me to suspect that the shaking is from a failing optical-image-stabilizer function, causing the lens to shift around wildly as it tries to hold position. The magnet seemed to lock it in place, which would work for some scenarios, but not in darker environments where it really helps to have the camera steadying itself electronically.

9738318194
Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages