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ClearCam goes legit, will increase image resolution at a price

ClearCam has been around for a while, and I first took a look at it more than a year ago. It was a clever app that had two modes. One mode took a series of four pictures in rapid succession, and then it saved the best and sharpest one in your photo library; the other mode took six images together and stacked them in order to increase resolution and reduce noise. In practice, it meant that the old 3G 2MP camera became the rough equivalent of a 4MP camera.

The app had been pulled from the App Store for a while -- the SDK did not allow access to raw iPhone images (only compressed images), which meant it was impossible to run any enhancement algorithms on the data. The SDK now allows for access to those uncompressed images, iPhone cameras are better, and ClearCam has returned as a regular iPhone app. It runs on the 3GS and the iPhone 4, and it requires iOS 4.

The app is similar to the original version, although now it chooses the best shot out of three instead of four. For the stacking or enhanced mode, it still takes six images and then aligns and processes them.


How did it work? It actually worked pretty well. The images that I rattled off on the iPhone 4 came out at roughly double the resolution when I used the software. If you are enlarging your images for printing, it's definitely a worthwhile feature.

On the downside, this works best for static photos. The enhanced mode requires six very similar frames for alignment and processing. That won't work well for images of people; they move too quickly for the software to do the processing. You can forget shooting sports or animals either.

The other drawback is that the app seems unable to access the focus mode, which is where you tap on the screen and select what should be in focus. Generally, my pictures were in focus, but when getting it right is critical, you can't choose what part of the frame is going to be the sharpest. I hope that will be added in the next version.

Also, note that it takes a while to take the six images, align them, and save them to your camera roll; the whole process takes just over a minute. If you are in a hurry, you can align and enhance the images later. Either way, they are saved on your iPhone.

If you look in the gallery, you'll see an image that I took in the garden. The ClearCam image is twice as large, but it has the same resolution as the image that I took with the stock iPhone camera. When we upload these, the quality is reduced a bit, so it's not a perfect way to judge the images. But trust me when I say that, if you are photographing text or detail, your photos should be sharper if you use ClearCam.

ClearCam is US $1.99 on the App Store. That's a much better price than the older version, which was $9.99.

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iPhone

ClearCam has been around for a while, and I first took a look at it more than a year ago. It was a clever app that had two modes. One mode...
 

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Raj

Jeff,

This is a great idea, but you might want to ask Mel to redo or add to the photos in the gallery... it's not appealing at all from those samples.

I'm intrigued though (as a 3GS owner).

July 29 2010 at 6:04 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
Brian

Marc nailed it. Looks like an interesting idea, but it doesn't look like it executes it well. I am really happy with the camera on th iPhone 4 compared to my old 3G. However, I've noticed execptionally poor white balance in low light and when using flash. Maybe there's an app for that?

July 29 2010 at 3:22 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
JKT

If the app worked on the 3G before, why wouldn't it now?? Odd that they'd remove that functionality.

July 29 2010 at 1:55 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
1 reply to JKT's comment
Jeff Powers

Hey JKT - I'm a co-founder of the company behind this app. It actually does still run on the 3G, but due to a bug in iOS 4.0 and 4.0.1, it mucks up the onboard camera after you use it one time so we recommend not using it. A bugfix from Apple is expected in the next iOS release since it's a pretty severe bug that is not ClearCam's fault.

July 29 2010 at 4:08 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
James Ahlschwede

Maybe I'm doing something wrong, but on my iPhone 4 the Enhanced photos, when I email them to myself at Actual Size, are lower res than the originals - 1920x1452/2.8 Megapixels. I shoot with Enhanced selected, go to the little folder of images and then the photo I just took, hit the align button, then the Enhance button, and then Save to Camera roll. Am I missing something?

July 29 2010 at 1:43 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
2 replies to James Ahlschwede's comment
Jeff Powers

If you email photos, the Photos app for some reason downsizes the image as you've noticed. The trick is to either sync with your computer, or to use the Copy / Paste functionality to Copy a photo from your photo roll and manually Paste it into the email. When you do it that way, it preserves the full size.

July 29 2010 at 4:11 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
James Ahlschwede

Copy and paste did the trick - the photos are 11 MP (3840x2904), and look pretty good - thanks!

July 29 2010 at 4:15 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
marc

they look the same to me in image quality and only slightly different in size. i'm glad i didn't waste any money on this.

July 29 2010 at 12:55 PM Report abuse rate up rate down Reply
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