For most people, the camera app that comes pre-installed on your phone is perfectly capable of producing good photos. Sure, there are third-party options with advanced features, but those are for ...
The difference in sharpness between the original image (right) and the AI Denoise version (left) isn't immediately obvious, but it does help give the scene a bit more crispness overall. - Andrew ...
Former Google camera leads Marc Levoy and Florian Kainz have launched a new iOS-only camera app called Project Indigo under Adobe, and it’s essentially a reimagined version of the Pixel Camera app.
Adobe has quietly revealed a potentially powerful new app for iPhones named Project Indigo. The news comes from the company's research website, which provides a lot of details on the reasoning behind ...
Marc Levoy, a former distinguished engineer at Google who helped put the Pixel camera on the map, helped build the app at Adobe. Marc Levoy, a former distinguished engineer at Google who helped put ...
If you are familiar with images taken with big, modern cameras, you'd have noticed that they capture way better images when compared to mobile cameras. The good news, however, is that Adobe has ...
If you are fond of using a third-party camera app on your iPhone, then Adobe's new "Project Indigo" app is for you as it brings a different kind of approach to the smartphone's photography ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Adobe is still squaring away the new square-format sensor. Adobe is still squaring away the new square-format ...
One of the best things about Project Indigo is that it can take high quality photos through a multi frame processing method. Rather than shooting a single picture, the app takes multiple frames and ...
A new initiative from Adobe aims to improve smartphone cameras and computational photography in general to give a more natural, SLR-like look to iPhone photography. A new paper from Adobe Fellow Marc ...
The latest update to the new Project Indigo app disables super-resolution by default on many iPhones. The changes appear aimed at reducing overheating and stability issues reported in early tests.