>> I think the burst feature is rather cool! I can also get that burst feature with the touch screen "shutter" by leaving my finger on it. I wonder if that would be useful for moving objects like "real" bursts are.
By default, the iPhone wants to pick the best image out of a high-speed burst. You don't have to do that, however. You *can* save ALL of them to review later.
In fact, this is what the default image naming looks like:
2013-10-05 17.09.53.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.09-1.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.09-2.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.09-3.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.09-4.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.09-5.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-1.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-2.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-3.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-4.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-5.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-6.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-7.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-8.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-9.jpg
2013-10-05 17.48.10-10.jpg
That is:
One single shot at 17.09.53
A burst of 15 shots starting during the 17.48.09 second, and continuing through the 17.48.10 second.
That is from copying ALL of the test burst over to my Mac.
> IME the burst mode takes smaller photos. Not full resolution :(
> ~KLM
I just checked.
Exactly the same pixel dimensions as a regular, single, shot.
8 MP.
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Jim Saklad mailto:jimdoc@icloud.com
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