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Yes, Apple will 'fake' zoomed photos on the iPhone 15 too - but how far will it go?
Macworld
|June 2023
Of course, the Galaxy S23 Ultra isn't taking actual clear pictures of the moon.

You might have seen headlines this week about the Samsung Galaxy S23 Ultra taking so-called "fake" moon pictures. Ever since the S20 Ultra, Samsung has had a feature called Space Zoom that marries its 10X optical zoom with massive digital zoom to reach a combined 100X zoom. In marketing shots, Samsung has shown its phone taking nearly crystal clear pictures of the moon, and users have done the same on a clear night.
But a Redditor has proven (fave.co/ 3NtOlck) that Samsung's incredible Space Zoom is using a bit of trickery. It turns out that when taking pictures of the moon, Samsung's Al-based Scene Optimizer does a whole lot of heavy lifting to make it look like the moon was photographed with a high-resolution telescope rather than a smartphone. So when someone takes a shot of the moon-in the sky or on a computer screen as in the Reddit postSamsung's computational engine takes over and clears up the craters and contours that the camera missed.
In a follow-up post (fave.co/3NneXvv), they prove beyond much doubt that Samsung is indeed adding "moon" imagery to photos to make the shot clearer. As they explain, "The computer vision module/Al recognizes the moon, you take the picture, and at this point, a neural network trained on countless moon images fills in the details that were not available optically." That's a bit more "fake" than Samsung lets on, but it's still very much to be expected.
Cette histoire est tirée de l'édition June 2023 de Macworld.
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