MAzing87
Member
I'm surprised that this thread doesn't have a single pic produced by Camera Zoom. I have played around with FxCamera and that gave far better pictures than the stock camera. But not one pic from Camera Zoom?
This application does not utilize the full capabilities of the camera on the Droid. Pictures are taken at 72 DPI, even when the JPEG quality is set to maximum, and theo resolution is set to maximum.
This said, the comments that state that it isn't producing pictures as good as the stock Droid application are 100% accurate.
Joel
I am talking about Camera Zoom FX, yes. I determined this data in three ways:Joel,
Are you stating that about camera zoom, as compared to the stock program?
Also, how do you know this data?
This is the problem of quoting an article that one found using a search engine to find...it's not quoted in its entirety, and relevant information is lost. DPI is, nevertheless, a representation that is commonly used. In the case of digital picture, it is representing the amount of information for a given amount of space. (Which is the point of the article you quoted.)dpi means nothing, only pixel resolution is important which is the same in Camera zoom - article below from Dpi, misunderstandings and explanation, what is dpi
You can find the properties of your digital photos in a photo editing program, but also in the Windows Explorer. Do a rightclick on your file and next: Properties > Summary > Advanced. These properties are called the EXIF-data. Or short EXIF. In that row also a value for dpi is given, f.e. the number 72, 180, 300 etc. This is a number without any meaning, it is an invented number! A box (field) has to be filled in, so every producer simply invents a number. Don't get confused, it is nonsense.A photofile in a camera or (stored at) a computer has no size in centimeters or inches. So no ppi (or dpi). Such a file only has a subdivision, a resolution, in pixels. From the moment you are going to print there is the matter of size, given in inches or centimeters. Only then you can speak of pixels per inch