Samsung’s recent Galaxy S24 series is the first to support the capture and display of Ultra HDR photos on social media platforms such as Instagram and Snapchat. However, according to a new report, similar functionality may soon become available to other Android devices.
As prominent Android expert Mishaal Rahman recently discovered, Google is making it easier for Android apps to shoot Ultra HDR photos by adding Ultra HDR image capture support to the CameraX API. This update could allow other smartphones to support the feature on social media platforms without a heavy investment in software development.
Ultra HDR photography is a game-changing upgrade made available with Android 14. For the first time, it allows Android devices to capture and display photos using the full range of colors and brightness levels that the hardware can provide while maintaining compatibility with standard JPEG files.
Announced in 2019, CameraX is a software library allowing developers to access Google’s advanced camera features with just a couple of lines of code. This library gives “in-app” cameras easy access to features such as Night Sight, Portrait Mode, and soon Ultra HDR, which would otherwise be available only when using a smartphone’s native camera app.
Google created CameraX after discovering that over 70% of all camera usage occurred on developer-made apps rather than the device’s built-in camera app. Shooting from inside popular third-party apps would often result in reduced picture quality and missing camera features without help from the CameraX API.
However, not all devices and apps use Google’s Camera APIs, so support for advanced camera features will continue to rely on support from individual manufacturers and developers.
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