![]() You can capture images in three formats: JPG, Raw or ‘Super Raw’. ![]() ![]() No touchscreen interface – no matter how slick or intuitive – can compete with the proper buttons and dials of digital SLR, as with practice you can adjust them without taking your eyes off what you’re shooting. ![]() The DxO One camera app is probably the best camera app I’ve ever used. On the right are four big, thumb-sized buttons to trigger pop-out menus for capture format (more on that later), a timer, flash and shooting modes. You can swipe across the screen on the back of the DxO One to change from photos to video – as you can shoot both without attaching it to your phone, but you’re essentially shooting blind and I never found a reason to do so – but everything else is reached via buttons and controls down the left and right of what turns out to be a rather brilliantly designed app. You also use your camera’s screen to access the DxO One’s controls. Your phone’s big screen – compared to most cameras – makes framing photos super easy. I’m quite a fan of fixed lens cameras and – from snapping on our phones – most of us are comfortable with moving around and contorting ourselves to get the right shot. Some people are going to be put off by the lack of a zoom lens, but that’s a sacrifice inherent in the DxO One’s core concept. And shooting Raw, I could further improve the shots at home in a way that’s just not possible with Apple’s Camera and Photos.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |