Tahir_
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a month ago in
Galaxy S1 Solution
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Nova3770
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a month ago in
Galaxy S
My 2 cents. I don't have an S24 Ultra but I used it for a bit at the Samsung store 2 years ago and I know how cameras work in general.
Use highest MP in bright daylight, and lower MP when there's less light for pixel binning.
If you don't like scene optimiser you can turn it off.
You can download camera assistant from Galaxy Store if you want faster shutter speeds, and there's probably other things that are useful in there
For the best results use Expert raw and edit in Lightroom or photoshop. Although more effort needs to be put in.
For videos use options that give you the highest bitrate. And I personally like using 4k60fps, but it might not be good when it's dark so you can drop down to 4k30 at those times. Only reason to use 8K is if you want to zoom in later and still have 4K or if you own an 8K display.
All of this will take up more space but you get more detail. Better to capture as much as possible then reduce it later because you can't add detail back that was lost when recorded.
If my comment was helpful then click 3 dots near my comment and click accept solution
Use highest MP in bright daylight, and lower MP when there's less light for pixel binning.
If you don't like scene optimiser you can turn it off.
You can download camera assistant from Galaxy Store if you want faster shutter speeds, and there's probably other things that are useful in there
For the best results use Expert raw and edit in Lightroom or photoshop. Although more effort needs to be put in.
For videos use options that give you the highest bitrate. And I personally like using 4k60fps, but it might not be good when it's dark so you can drop down to 4k30 at those times. Only reason to use 8K is if you want to zoom in later and still have 4K or if you own an 8K display.
All of this will take up more space but you get more detail. Better to capture as much as possible then reduce it later because you can't add detail back that was lost when recorded.
If my comment was helpful then click 3 dots near my comment and click accept solution
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Nova3770
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a month ago in
Galaxy S
My 2 cents. I don't have an S24 Ultra but I used it for a bit at the Samsung store 2 years ago and I know how cameras work in general.
Use highest MP in bright daylight, and lower MP when there's less light for pixel binning.
If you don't like scene optimiser you can turn it off.
You can download camera assistant from Galaxy Store if you want faster shutter speeds, and there's probably other things that are useful in there
For the best results use Expert raw and edit in Lightroom or photoshop. Although more effort needs to be put in.
For videos use options that give you the highest bitrate. And I personally like using 4k60fps, but it might not be good when it's dark so you can drop down to 4k30 at those times. Only reason to use 8K is if you want to zoom in later and still have 4K or if you own an 8K display.
All of this will take up more space but you get more detail. Better to capture as much as possible then reduce it later because you can't add detail back that was lost when recorded.
If my comment was helpful then click 3 dots near my comment and click accept solution
Use highest MP in bright daylight, and lower MP when there's less light for pixel binning.
If you don't like scene optimiser you can turn it off.
You can download camera assistant from Galaxy Store if you want faster shutter speeds, and there's probably other things that are useful in there
For the best results use Expert raw and edit in Lightroom or photoshop. Although more effort needs to be put in.
For videos use options that give you the highest bitrate. And I personally like using 4k60fps, but it might not be good when it's dark so you can drop down to 4k30 at those times. Only reason to use 8K is if you want to zoom in later and still have 4K or if you own an 8K display.
All of this will take up more space but you get more detail. Better to capture as much as possible then reduce it later because you can't add detail back that was lost when recorded.
If my comment was helpful then click 3 dots near my comment and click accept solution