When the company brought the new operating system 4.1 at that time, HDR was also among the functions it offered. The so-called HDR photos work very simply, the camera captures an overexposed and underexposed photo as well as a standard photo at the same time. Subsequently, they try to combine these three photos into a final image, which in most cases offers better color rendering than when shooting without HDR. This function which Apple already offered at iPhone 4, however, was always limited to iPhone and iPod touch.
Now in iOS 7 Beta 2, HDR, or High-Dynamic-Range, is also coming to iPads for the first time. All iOS supporting device iOS 7 now have an HDR function, thanks to which you will not take photos that are too bright or too dark on the iPad, but you should almost always get the optimal result. The function is available on both the classic 9,7″ iPad Retina, and on the iPad too mini. Sample photos come from the server Gizmodo.com
Well, I took exactly 0 photos with the iPad, but some people probably like it in a large version :).
My friend takes pictures with her iPad very often and she will definitely like this. Using the algorithm to combine the best of 3 photos at the cost of a slower shutter speed is really worth it.
I'm installing it right now. iOS 7 to my iPad mini and I can't anymore dockat :D
Hi Roman, I have a question. I read in some article that you still use iphone 4 (just like me :-). I want to ask if you have tested, or are you going to test, the four with iOS 7.
Thanks M.
HDR strives for better exposure and not color.