News

Home security cameras aren't always watching: When armed, they're motion-activated and they can ignore certain types of motion like swaying branches or small pets. However, you can turn up motion ...
The Camera Control button is a winner when it comes to being tactile. When you press it down all the way to launch the Camera app or to take a photo, there’s a satisfying popping feeling on your ...
Apple’s latest iPhone 16 series introduces a new camera control button. This button lets you quickly launch the camera, take photos, record videos, and adjust settings using capacitive touch ...
Notably, the iPhone 17 Pro and Pro Max are rumored to feature a new camera bar design, with renders of it circulating ...
While I haven’t felt dependent on the Camera Control when reaching across the 6.3-inch iPhone 16 Pro, I could see it coming in handy on something larger like the behemoth 6.9-inch iPhone 16 Pro Max.
The new Apple Camera Control button is here for better ergonomics. And perhaps better AI. Almost everything is easy to do on a smartphone these days. Until I want to take a picture. Suddenly, I ...
Camera Control is, in a way, a magnet for all camera-related features (and ones outside of photography and videography like Visual Intelligence), and, as such, decisions about features and ...
Likewise, Camera Control can be used to search for things you can see. Point the camera at a bike, for example, and clicking the button will use Google Image Search to find out more about it.
Apple's new Camera Control button looks to further enhance the iPhone 16's position as one of the best camera phones, but by adding Apple Intelligence, it also makes it less of a one-note feature.
Apple's latest iPhone 16 models include a new Camera Control button (located on the lower right-hand side when holding the phone in portrait mode), and the latest iOS 18.2 software update adds a ...
The Camera Control button can also be used for image-related searches and Apple Intelligence features. One great example is essentially Apple’s answer to Google Lens, letting you press and hold ...