macrumors.com — An unusual story has popped up on MobileGuerilla claiming to have found the first photos from an Apple iPhone on the web.The search method seemed rather primitive... they simply searched for "taken with an Apple iPhone" on Google and found a set of Flickr images (now removed) tagged with the phr...
Apr 29, 2007 View in Crawl 4
cgomezApr 29, 2007
Zippo, you said hella. Dugg down.
Closed AccountApr 29, 2007
That's cute. On the moon we have five ... thousand!
corsairstwApr 29, 2007
Think he's a Digg user?
georgeketigianApr 29, 2007
Very often, the Megapixel value is rounded up. For example, my 3.2 MP Pentax shoots photos at 2048x1536, which is ~3.15 MP.
darcoApr 29, 2007
Read my comment below, it is Alexander's Steakhouse.
Closed AccountApr 30, 2007
chazuk,your sarcasm detector broken?
chazukMay 1, 2007
It would seem so! :( :( :(
ilgazMay 4, 2007
Of course, there are optical reasons but you should really check images taken by cell phone cameras zoomed in, you can see that JPEG especially creates artefacts when such low optics are used.We speak about 6 GB minimum memory, lets hope at least they keep quality 100% and as OS X scaled down running, they keep colorsync on.
ilgazMay 4, 2007
No, there is orientation flag on EXIF data. Some software cares (Graphic Converter), some doesn't. I am not sure about browsers though.There is way too much on EXIF data to post to web btw, you should at least get rid of camera serial.
ilgazMay 4, 2007
there is rounding on cameras, especially phones. They can't label/advertise a consumer product as 1.875 mpixel of course :)1600x1200 is far better to work via software, pretty standard,established resolution fitting 4:3 aspect perfectly.