Both are universal in terms of light and use... They are made to be user friendly without messing with 100+ different configs for different situations / light conditions.
From the Author: My ponit of view regarding mobile photography - Personally i do believe that smartphones can do some decent photos - BUT! The photo's aren't made for 100x cropping and so... and if you want more details - you will get also more noise. I like to see a detailed photo with a true colors that will be a bit noisy if you going 100x crop. So please, avoid reporting a noise "issues" with 100x cropping - i'll just ignore those.
Both are universal in terms of light and use... They are made to be user friendly without messing with 100+ different configs for different situations / light conditions.
From the Author: My ponit of view regarding mobile photography - Personally i do believe that smartphones can do some decent photos - BUT! The photo's aren't made for 100x cropping and so... and if you want more details - you will get also more noise. I like to see a detailed photo with a true colors that will be a bit noisy if you going 100x crop. So please, avoid reporting a noise "issues" with 100x cropping - i'll just ignore those.
BY OnePlus 6/6T - GCam XMLs
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The lead from Wall Street offers little clarity as the major averages opened lower on Friday and then bounced back and forth across the unchanged line, finally finishing mixed and little changed.The Dow added 33.18 points or 0.10 percent to finish at 34,798.00, while the NASDAQ eased 4.54 points or 0.03 percent to close at 15,047.70 and the S&P 500 rose 6.50 points or 0.15 percent to end at 4,455.48. For the week, the Dow rose 0.6 percent, the NASDAQ added 0.1 percent and the S&P gained 0.5 percent.The lackluster performance on Wall Street came on uncertainty about the outlook for the markets following recent volatility.
The S&P 500 slumped 1.8% on Monday and Tuesday, thanks to China Evergrande, the Chinese property company that looks like it is ready to default on its more-than $300 billion in debt. Cries of the next Lehman Brothers—or maybe the next Silverado?—echoed through the canyons of Wall Street as investors prepared for the worst.