How to take better pictures on your budget phone

Jason Voorhees

Jason Voorhees

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Have you ever wondered how tf phone cameras have gotten so good these days? Like How tf can a phone camera sensor so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera, it's because of something called computational photography.

1000086480



The camera's sensor takes a raw image file and sends it image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all this happens I actually attended a workshop on Computer Vision and Photography in uni but not to bore with details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a bunch of complex algorithms on each and every pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how all this happens in almost real time milliseconds before you even press the shutter button your phone is running all these complex algorithms and crunching numbers to deliver the best results, what I said is just a very simplified explanation but that is the gist of it

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

1000086481


It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you only get GCam on Google's Pixel phones that are expensive and not that great for the money you spend. They have slower chips, bad battery and are expensive but because it's android there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones also.


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phone

Stick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

1000086483
1000086484
1000086485



For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes to deliver the best results

1000086488

1000086486


Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details, balanced exposures. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye and produces flatter neutral pics

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time or patience to edit my pictures one by one. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. Pics are vibrant, not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It also recovers shadows and highlights better than iphone so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are also still unmoggable in the video department but in photography in my subjective opinion, Gcam is better


1000086494
1000086493


So there you have it. Now you can now take mogger pics on your potato tier phone too.
 
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Have you ever wondered how phone cameras have gotten so good? How can a phone camera so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor just takes a raw image file and then sends it to image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all it happens I actually attended a workshop on this in uni but to not bore with your details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a a complex algorithms on each pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how how this happens even before you press the shutter button it's doing all this complex algorithms and NLPs, what I said is just a very simplified explanation of it but that is gist of it.

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you get all only Google's Pixel phone that are expensive and not that great. They have slower chips and bad battery and are expensive but there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phoneStick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes.

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye.

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time to edit my pictures. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. They are vibrant but not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It recovers shadows and highlights better, so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But the iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are still unmoggable in the video department not even close but in photography I think Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can turn your potato tier phone to take great pictures too.
Thanks I have iPhone 15 tho
 
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seems very helpful will read later bookmarked for now
 
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Have you ever wondered how phone cameras have gotten so good? How can a phone camera so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor just takes a raw image file and then sends it to image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all it happens I actually attended a workshop on this in uni but to not bore with your details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a a complex algorithms on each pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how how this happens even before you press the shutter button it's doing all this complex algorithms and NLPs, what I said is just a very simplified explanation of it but that is gist of it.

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you get all only Google's Pixel phone that are expensive and not that great. They have slower chips and bad battery and are expensive but there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phoneStick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes.

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye.

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time to edit my pictures. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. They are vibrant but not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It recovers shadows and highlights better, so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But the iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are still unmoggable in the video department not even close but in photography I think Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can turn your potato tier phone to take great pictures too.
Bruhhh this thread is incredibly good, pure lifefuel for androidcels like me :aheago::aheago::aheago:
 
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:smonk:
nice thread
but i don't take pictures either way even if i do its like one a year​
 
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I knew it from using the camera, when you see your face on the phone screen camera the image looks quite different than after you take the picture

shitty computers are downgrading my looks through their shitty jewish algorithm no cap i look better in the screen image and worse in the pics
 
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good thread thank you
 
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Have you ever wondered how tf phone cameras have gotten so good these days? Like How tf can a phone camera sensor so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera, it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor takes a raw image file and that it sends it image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all this happens I actually attended a workshop on Computer Vision and Photography in uni but not to bore with details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a complex algorithms on each and every pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how this happens in milliseconds before you even press the shutter button your phone is running all these complex algorithms and crunching numbers to deliver the best results, what I said is just a very simplified explanation but that is gist of it

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you get all only Google's Pixel phone that are expensive and not that great. They have slower chips and bad battery and are expensive but there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phoneStick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes.

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye.

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time to edit my pictures. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. They are vibrant but not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It recovers shadows and highlights better, so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But the iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are still unmoggable in the video department not even close but in photography I think Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can turn your potato tier phone to take great pictures too.
High IQ
 
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I knew it from using the camera, when you see your face on the phone screen camera the image looks quite different than after you take the picture

shitty computers are downgrading my looks through their shitty jewish algorithm no cap i look better in the screen image and worse in the pics
Us Latinos are stuck with the shitty ass cameras bro
 
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seems very helpful will read later bookmarked for now
This is one picture I took with my budget phone when I was in Mumbai
IMG 20250518 171806
 
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@Jattgymmaxx @barambo
 
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Have you ever wondered how tf phone cameras have gotten so good these days? Like How tf can a phone camera sensor so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera, it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor takes a raw image file and sends it image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all this happens I actually attended a workshop on Computer Vision and Photography in uni but not to bore with details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a bunch of complex algorithms on each and every pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how all this happens in almost real time milliseconds before you even press the shutter button your phone is running all these complex algorithms and crunching numbers to deliver the best results, what I said is just a very simplified explanation but that is the gist of it

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you only get GCam on Google's Pixel phones that are expensive and not that great for the money you spend. They have slower chips, bad battery and are expensive but because it's android there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones also.


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phone

Stick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes to deliver the best results

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye.

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time to edit my pictures. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. They are vibrant but not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It recovers shadows and highlights better, so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But the iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are still unmoggable in the video department not even close but in photography I think Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can talk mogger pics on your potato tier phone too.
ty, ive downloaded gcam
 
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@PrettyLights @benchmaxxer @BigBallsLarry
 
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Have you ever wondered how tf phone cameras have gotten so good these days? Like How tf can a phone camera sensor so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera, it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor takes a raw image file and sends it image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all this happens I actually attended a workshop on Computer Vision and Photography in uni but not to bore with details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a bunch of complex algorithms on each and every pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how all this happens in almost real time milliseconds before you even press the shutter button your phone is running all these complex algorithms and crunching numbers to deliver the best results, what I said is just a very simplified explanation but that is the gist of it

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you only get GCam on Google's Pixel phones that are expensive and not that great for the money you spend. They have slower chips, bad battery and are expensive but because it's android there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones also.


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phone

Stick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes to deliver the best results

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye.

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time to edit my pictures. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. They are vibrant but not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It recovers shadows and highlights better, so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But the iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are still unmoggable in the video department not even close but in photography I think Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can talk mogger pics on your potato tier phone too.
do you think androids will ever fix the shitty tiktok quality issue?
 
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Bookmarked. My iPhone 11 is starting to struggle :forcedsmile:
 
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do you think androids will ever fix the shitty tiktok quality issue?
The TikTok quality issue on Android isn't really about weak cameras it's because the app doesn't use Android's full camera pipeline the way it does on iPhones. On iOSTikTok taps directly into Apple's image processing but on Android it relies on a generic feed but some of the newer Samsung and Pixel phones have somewhat fixed this issue
 
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fascinating read, especially for someone whose tech savviness starts with Excel and ends with Python.

This also explains to me, as someone who always gets the newest iPhone Pro every year, why whenever I see pictures taken by even a basic Pixel phone, I feel utterly mogged. Google Pixel picture quality is unmatched.
 
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@kurd @jeoyw9192
 
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:feelsokman:
 
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@VV62 @jeb98
 
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@slaters @unon
 
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Have you ever wondered how tf phone cameras have gotten so good these days? Like How tf can a phone camera sensor so tiny take pictures on par with thousands of dollars DSLR/Mirror less camera, it's because of something called computational photography.

View attachment 4123807


The camera's sensor takes a raw image file and sends it image processing unit which correct shadows, overblown highlights, details, exposures etc. I can go into detail on how all this happens I actually attended a workshop on Computer Vision and Photography in uni but not to bore with details. Your phone camera takes multiples picture that it runs through a bunch of complex algorithms on each and every pixel of the photo. Yes each and every single pixel and analyzes everything to give the best output. It's actually quite fascinating how all this happens in almost real time milliseconds before you even press the shutter button your phone is running all these complex algorithms and crunching numbers to deliver the best results, what I said is just a very simplified explanation but that is the gist of it

Every phone company has their own versions of image processing. Like samsung produces over sharpened saturated pics. Xiaomi likes to make pictures more softer and dreamy. I personally like samsung's implementation to be very honest but most people say that best one in the buisness is Google's Pixel camera. The GCam app.

View attachment 4123816

It's legendary for its computational photography. HDR+ for dynamic range, Night Sight for low-light and Portrait Mode for DSLR like bokeh The Pixel look is about natural colors, sharp details, and noise free shots that don't look like overprocessed Instagram filters.

The problem you only get GCam on Google's Pixel phones that are expensive and not that great for the money you spend. They have slower chips, bad battery and are expensive but because it's android there are ways to get the GCam on your budget phones also.


Option 1: XDA Ports - The best Way

XDA Forums is where devs like BSG, Arnova8G2, BigKaka, and Shamim reverse engineer the GCam for Samsung, OnePlus, Xiaomi, etc. These are device specific for optimal performance.

How to Install:

a. Visit celsoazevedo.com (XDA's mirror for GCam APKs). Search your phone (e.g., "GCam for Galaxy S23")


b. Check XDA threads for stable versions.

c. Download the APK. Enable "Install from unknown sources" in settings.

d. Install and test. If it crashes, try another version or load a config (XML file) from XDA for your phone

Stick to celsoazevedo.com or XDA threads to avoid malware. GCam isn't open-source, so trust reputable devs only.


Method-2 GCamator App - The Shortcut

GCamator (on Google Play)



is a database of GCam ports, pulling from XDA and other sources. It matches APKs to your phone model.


How to Use:

a. Download GCamator from Google Play or Uptodown.

b. Open, select your phone, and view compatible GCam versions with download links.

c. Install the APK. Requires Camera2API most Androids post 2018 support it. You are fucked if you have a phone with mediatek processor tho.

Results

View attachment 4123830View attachment 4123831View attachment 4123832


For iPhonecels. Iphone already has a pretty solid image processing engine. Apple uses Deep Fusion. Uses the Neural Engine A13 chip and later. Or Iphone 11+ it process nine images (four short four secondary, one long exposure) pixel-by-pixel. Optimizes texture, detail, and noise in medium to low light. Great for indoor selfies, hair, and fabric. It works along with another technique called Smart HDR Combines multiple exposures for balanced lighting in high contrast scenes to deliver the best results

View attachment 4123858
View attachment 4123841

Iphone tends to always go for more neutral washed out colors and softer details, balanced exposures. It prioritizes true to life more than pleasant to the eye and produces flatter neutral pics

I personally like GCam more. I'm not a photographer or a photography nerd and don't have the time or patience to edit my pictures one by one. I just want to click and be done. And for that gcam is imo better. Pics are vibrant, not overdone, natural and pleasing on gcam. It also recovers shadows and highlights better than iphone so your face doesn't look flat in harsh sunlight. But iPhone's skin tones are still industry leading. Iphones are also still unmoggable in the video department but in photography in my subjective opinion, Gcam is better


View attachment 4123873View attachment 4123874

So there you have it. Now you can now take mogger pics on your potato tier phone too.
Would read if I didn’t have iPhone 15 Pro
 
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@Shrek2OnDvD
 
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@NotAMogger @Petsmart @Swarthy Knight
 
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@User28823 thousands of hours of engineering and complex computation only for a nigger to send his microdick in 4K quality
 
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