camera

dirty6

New Member
Yes, that's not a lens and flash up there, but it is a proximity sensor and an ambient light sensor...the first tells the phone when your face is up against it (to turn the touchscreen off) and the second gauges the amount of light around you to properly set the auto-brightness of the screen.

I will give u this much-the other day when I was out in the bright sun with the light shining right into those sensors, the way they are arranged they really do look like a camera/flash.

But, no cam on this camera for 2 way video skype. Sorry.
 
Haven't heard. But its not as bad as some people think

sent from my Droid RAZR. 1st android after almost 4 years with apple.
 

chili6301

New Member
My pictures just seem dark and gloomy. Don't seem yo be real crisp either. Maybe I just have some settings wrong. Idk
 

chili6301

New Member
Thanks. That helped. I've played with those settings before but there is no way to lock them in when you change them. You have to adjust them every time.
 

JP 5.56

Member
With most phones, because they have such tiny camera chips in them, they usually do poorly in low light. That said, with a little light, the RAZR camera is actually pretty decent. This picture is one I took just to see how close I could get with as much detail.
2011-11-28_14-38-09_0.jpg
 

AdamPA1006

Member
1. Try a different camera app
2. Clear cache/dalvick
3. Good luck

Sent from my Note 2 using the Droid Forums App
 

pistacio

Member
Don't use the stock camera. Once it is opened, no other camera will work. Reboot your phone or do a battery pull. Then once you reboot, only use a third party camera app, like Camera Zoom FX.

If u open stock camera, you will have to reboot again.

Sent from my DROID BIONIC using Tapatalk 2
 
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