Quote:
Originally Posted by dr g
Actually all video is is a method of taking many still pictures and processing it into a continuous file, which has a much greater requirement on processing speed and storage speed versus a single high-resolution photo capture, so the statement is completely true. The blur has NOTHING to do with video processing. It can't possibly. Basic photography.
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Sorry missing the point again. a camera takes a point in time frame of a video and since it is digital has to process the information into a format in this case primarily jpeg. If it has poor video processing performance it cannot grab all of the information fast enough thusly extending the exposure and bluring all but the steadiest of subjects. that is exactly how I can turn a 20 dollar web cam into something that performs near the level of my 300 dollar digital camera. An image is the same thing as a really short video from the terms of processing.
*note* I tried the driver and having someone time the time it takes from focus to snap it shaved about an eight of a second off the shot in medium light. noticable but not significant enough if it slows down literally any other part of the phone since the camera is still not quite useable.