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Originally Posted by ian3047
Well I would think if this is somehow allowing the hardware to work or do more of the work more efficiently it would then take some software strain and processing power off the device as a whole and allow just a little more power to snap a picture properly. Anything that can optimize the way the OS runs can improve device speed and ability. Some process has to tell it to snap the picture even their is no push button, shutter or roll of film. Heck if you could somehow load the built in camera software to run entirely off the memory card I'll bet the pictures would be quite a mess.
But all that aside, and even from how others have said it is working. If you own two of them and don't have them loaded with third party junk and do a side by side you'll notice a difference.
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Doesn't work that way. A camera's parameters to give a proper exposure do not vary, regardless of how fast the camera is operating. You will get an improperly exposed picture if a certain parameter is changed without compensating with another parameter. It's not something where you can just speed up normal operation and fix the blur. The camera simply does not boost ISO aggressively to compensate for low light conditions. That is not something that is solved by anything other than changes to the camera software.