Media

White balance: Select an appropriate white balance, so images have a true-to-life colour range. The settings are designed for specific lighting situations. These settings are similar to the heat range for white-balance exposure in professional cameras.

ISO: Select an ISO value. This controls camera light sensitivity. It is measured in film- camera equivalents. Low values are for stationary or brightly-lit objects. Higher values are for fast-moving or poorly-lit objects.

Metering: Select a metering method. This determines how light values are calculated. Centre-weightedmeasures background light in the centre of the scene. Spot measures the light value at a specific location. Matrix averages the entire scene.

Outdoor visibility: Use this for bright, outdoor conditions.

Auto contrast: Set the camera to use automatic contrast. Automatic contrast defines contrast levels without manual input.

Guidelines: Display viewfinder guides to help composition when selecting subjects.

Auto share shot: Set to automatically activate Wi-Fi Direct and switch to share shot mode when you touch the back of your device to another NFC-enabled device, and then tap the screen of your device’s screen.

Anti-Shake: Activate or deactivate anti-shake. Anti-shake helps focus when the camera is moving.

GPS tag: Attach a GPS location tag to the photo.

To improve GPS signals, avoid shooting in locations where the signal may be obstructed, such as between buildings or in low-lying areas, or in poor weather conditions.

Your location may appear on your photos when you upload them to the Internet. To avoid this, deactivate the GPS tag setting.

Contextual filename: Set the camera to display contextual tags.

Take photos using voice: Set the camera to take photos with voice commands.

Save as flipped: Invert the image to create a mirror-image of the original scene.

Image quality: Higher quality images require more storage space.

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