A new initiative from Adobe aims to improve smartphone cameras and computational photography in general to give a more natural, SLR-like look to iPhone photography. A new paper from Adobe Fellow Marc ...
A year ago, a rather interesting camera tool came out from the house of Lux, makers of the fantastic Kino and Halide apps. The tool is called Process Zero, which essentially ripped the images of Apple ...
Adobe has quietly revealed a potentially powerful new app for iPhones named Project Indigo. The news comes from the company's research website, which provides a lot of details on the reasoning behind ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. Adobe is still squaring away the new square-format sensor. Adobe is still squaring away the new square-format ...
If you are fond of using a third-party camera app on your iPhone, then Adobe's new "Project Indigo" app is for you as it brings a different kind of approach to the smartphone's photography ...
When Adobe released the Project Indigo app earlier this year, it brought a new level of professional camera settings to the iPhone. Sure, the cameras in recent iPhone models capture impressive images, ...
I’ve spent a decade testing cameras and phones, and I’m picky. So when I heard that Project Indigo was designed by true camera geeks, like Marc Levoy, the guy behind Google’s early Pixel cameras, I ...
Last week Adobe Labs quietly unveiled Project Indigo, its impressive new (and free) computational photography app for iOS with some serious provenance. Available for iPhone 12 Pro/Pro Max, 13 Pro/Pro ...
Don't miss out on our latest stories. Add PCMag as a preferred source on Google. If you've got an iPhone 17 and have been waiting to try Adobe's Project Indigo app for photography, there's good news.
One of the best things about Project Indigo is that it can take high quality photos through a multi frame processing method. Rather than shooting a single picture, the app takes multiple frames and ...