Comment by atorodius 1 year ago I feel like my iPhone does it. But not sure. Sound definitely changes when you zoom while recording 10 comments atorodius Reply internetter 1 year ago They do. They rarely mention it but they do:https://devstreaming-cdn.apple.com/videos/wwdc/2019/249a0jw9... ghostly_s 1 year ago The only content regarding audio I saw here are slides 124-140, which cover beam-forming but I didn't see anything about a default beam-forming profile tied to virtual zoom. ThomasBb 1 year ago On current iPhone Pro (16) you can even select the audio mix you want for recorded video after recording. nevster 1 year ago Unfortunately in practice I've found it sounds not great. 1 reply → elijahciali 1 year ago This is a feature of iPhone, yes. Believe it came around the 11 (?) but it can really help when recording concerts if you're into that sort of thing. TylerE 1 year ago Funny, that’s exactly when I hate it the most! If you zoom mid clip the sound very audibly changes which is not desirable. xnzakg 1 year ago Samsung phones have this as well, can be enabled or disabled in the camera settings. bayindirh 1 year ago Mine is too old to test the claim, but knowing that it has at least three microphones on board, It'd be absurd if Apple didn't implement it. entropicdrifter 1 year ago It's pretty computationally cheap, too, as long as you've got the math right and an easy way to choose where to aim the beam
internetter 1 year ago They do. They rarely mention it but they do:https://devstreaming-cdn.apple.com/videos/wwdc/2019/249a0jw9... ghostly_s 1 year ago The only content regarding audio I saw here are slides 124-140, which cover beam-forming but I didn't see anything about a default beam-forming profile tied to virtual zoom. ThomasBb 1 year ago On current iPhone Pro (16) you can even select the audio mix you want for recorded video after recording. nevster 1 year ago Unfortunately in practice I've found it sounds not great. 1 reply →
ghostly_s 1 year ago The only content regarding audio I saw here are slides 124-140, which cover beam-forming but I didn't see anything about a default beam-forming profile tied to virtual zoom.
ThomasBb 1 year ago On current iPhone Pro (16) you can even select the audio mix you want for recorded video after recording. nevster 1 year ago Unfortunately in practice I've found it sounds not great. 1 reply →
elijahciali 1 year ago This is a feature of iPhone, yes. Believe it came around the 11 (?) but it can really help when recording concerts if you're into that sort of thing. TylerE 1 year ago Funny, that’s exactly when I hate it the most! If you zoom mid clip the sound very audibly changes which is not desirable.
TylerE 1 year ago Funny, that’s exactly when I hate it the most! If you zoom mid clip the sound very audibly changes which is not desirable.
xnzakg 1 year ago Samsung phones have this as well, can be enabled or disabled in the camera settings.
bayindirh 1 year ago Mine is too old to test the claim, but knowing that it has at least three microphones on board, It'd be absurd if Apple didn't implement it. entropicdrifter 1 year ago It's pretty computationally cheap, too, as long as you've got the math right and an easy way to choose where to aim the beam
entropicdrifter 1 year ago It's pretty computationally cheap, too, as long as you've got the math right and an easy way to choose where to aim the beam
They do. They rarely mention it but they do:
https://devstreaming-cdn.apple.com/videos/wwdc/2019/249a0jw9...
The only content regarding audio I saw here are slides 124-140, which cover beam-forming but I didn't see anything about a default beam-forming profile tied to virtual zoom.
On current iPhone Pro (16) you can even select the audio mix you want for recorded video after recording.
Unfortunately in practice I've found it sounds not great.
1 reply →
This is a feature of iPhone, yes. Believe it came around the 11 (?) but it can really help when recording concerts if you're into that sort of thing.
Funny, that’s exactly when I hate it the most! If you zoom mid clip the sound very audibly changes which is not desirable.
Samsung phones have this as well, can be enabled or disabled in the camera settings.
Mine is too old to test the claim, but knowing that it has at least three microphones on board, It'd be absurd if Apple didn't implement it.
It's pretty computationally cheap, too, as long as you've got the math right and an easy way to choose where to aim the beam