I don't know about anyone else, but I use burst mode quite a lot to capture a subject in motion, where I just want a particular moment and know I can't press shutter at exactly the right time. Or if I'm panning with a subject and just want the one sharp photo.
So I'll burst mode 100 or so images, and then open up gallery and delete all except one or two. What I would really like is a way to burst mode a load of images (maybe to a temp folder), then scroll through a timeline to choose the shot I want, and then the rest be gone. Maybe even it could just be a separate 'time-travel photo' mode, where it takes a fast burst for as long as you hold down, and then lets you scroll left and right to get to the right shot?
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Anonymous
Anonymous
-
2021-11-10
Hi, I usually take bursts too. I do not use the 'Save Location' of Open Camera a the permanent storage for the good photos, for me it is the 'temp folder'. I have other folders by motif, occasions, and such. I use the Simple Mobile Tools Gallery app (very good freeware gallery app) to scroll through the photos and chose/move those that I want to keep permanently, by doing the 'Move to a folder' operation in that app, that command can be assigned to the toolbar of this app, so it is very quick to use. This Gallery app servers also as the default viewer for Open Camera, so they are very good pair together.
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Anonymous
Anonymous
-
2021-11-10
BTW: The internal memory is usually faster, or seriously faster, than the SDcard. I have a 'Kingston 128GB microSDXC Canvas Go Plus 170R A2 U3 V30' card (read 'up to' 170MB/s, write 'up to ' 90 MB/s) in a Xiaomi Redmi Note 9T, writing a large file from the internal memory to the SDcard is 2x faster than vice versa.So, I have the 'Save location' of Open camera on the internal memory in order to get the best sped for the bursts.
Another way to seize the golden moment is just recording 4K videos clips, the frames are 8 MP and can be easily extracted using VLC on PC.
If you would like to refer to this comment somewhere else in this project, copy and paste the following link:
I don't know about anyone else, but I use burst mode quite a lot to capture a subject in motion, where I just want a particular moment and know I can't press shutter at exactly the right time. Or if I'm panning with a subject and just want the one sharp photo.
So I'll burst mode 100 or so images, and then open up gallery and delete all except one or two. What I would really like is a way to burst mode a load of images (maybe to a temp folder), then scroll through a timeline to choose the shot I want, and then the rest be gone. Maybe even it could just be a separate 'time-travel photo' mode, where it takes a fast burst for as long as you hold down, and then lets you scroll left and right to get to the right shot?
Hi, I usually take bursts too. I do not use the 'Save Location' of Open Camera a the permanent storage for the good photos, for me it is the 'temp folder'. I have other folders by motif, occasions, and such. I use the Simple Mobile Tools Gallery app (very good freeware gallery app) to scroll through the photos and chose/move those that I want to keep permanently, by doing the 'Move to a folder' operation in that app, that command can be assigned to the toolbar of this app, so it is very quick to use. This Gallery app servers also as the default viewer for Open Camera, so they are very good pair together.
BTW: The internal memory is usually faster, or seriously faster, than the SDcard. I have a 'Kingston 128GB microSDXC Canvas Go Plus 170R A2 U3 V30' card (read 'up to' 170MB/s, write 'up to ' 90 MB/s) in a Xiaomi Redmi Note 9T, writing a large file from the internal memory to the SDcard is 2x faster than vice versa.So, I have the 'Save location' of Open camera on the internal memory in order to get the best sped for the bursts.
Another way to seize the golden moment is just recording 4K videos clips, the frames are 8 MP and can be easily extracted using VLC on PC.