Especially take a close look at my shirt.On the left is a selfie I took with the iPhone 11 Pro. Night Camera is a free app that lets you take pictures in dark places with a light exposure up to 1 second. Obviously the XS doesn't have the new lens so there's nothing to compare it too. Whether you’re shooting the last minutes of sunset, a night cityscape, or a candle-lit room, iPhone Night mode produces impressive results. Also, while the phone is taking photos, the viewfinder dims and slowly brightens as the capture sequence goes on. The iPhone 11 Pro then fuses all the photos together to reduce motion blur and brighten shadows. The developers are steadily working on improving the app to avoid these problems and stay consistent with its features.As of now, the latest iOS 13 update has yet to include the improved camera features of the,Apple And Valve Reportedly Collaborating To Develop AR Glasses For Gamers,Burn calories and exercise instead of burning out while you work from home,This Microsoft Excel Course Will Make You Computer Maven of Your Office,This Real Estate Tool Can Predict the Best Properties to Invest In,Global Stocks Mostly Fall As Coronavirus Dogs Sentiment,Facebook Faces Lawsuit Over Facial Recognition Data,China Launches Sanctions Regime After US Moves On TikTok, WeChat,Seniors Moving Towards Biden Amid Pandemic,Trump Woos Farmers With Promise Of $14 Bn In Pandemic Aid. The way it works is when you open up the default camera app up it determines when it's dark enough to go into Night Mode. What's crazy is how you'd never know I was in a living room when I took the photos below.I really like the video quality from the iPhone XS. The 11 Pro now includes extended dynamic range for 4K 60fps. Updated with information about Deep Fusion.Be respectful, keep it civil and stay on topic. But on closer inspection Apple actually made tweaks to its photography software chemistry to give photos a more natural look. And on the right is one from the iPhone XS.Selfie video is improved, too. The one from the iPhone 11 Pro has better colors that are more true to life while the one from the iPhone XS looks a bit dull. 1. These changes are not as obvious, but the adjustments Apple made to Smart HDR for the 11 Pro are appreciated.The iPhone 11 Pro has a new version that pulls back the aggressiveness of Smart HDR. Also be nice if we could use the volume buttons as a capture button like in the native camera app.I think there are better and free alternatives. App could use a little polish. We tested the iPhone 11 Pro's trio of new rear cameras against last year's iPhone XS. Once you tap it, you’ll find the shutter speed, ISO and even the white balance at the bottom of the screen. There is also a Night Mode that completely transforms the iPhone into a low-light picture machine on par with the Pixel 3's Night Sight.Apple also added a nifty Snapchat-style "hold the shutter button down" to record a video feature, the camera app viewfinder lets you see what's outside your frame (using the ultrawide lens) and Apple changed the font inside the camera app to one aptly enough called SF Camera which you'll notice on the control dials and mode names.To test all these changes and improvements (large and small), I took the iPhone 11 Pro and iPhone XS out and around San Francisco to see just how much better the new phone is. At times, the image may have problems with highlights and pictures can still turn out to be dark. The final photo always looked better than the live preview.When I tried taking similar photos on the iPhone XS they came out pretty bad. JavaScript is disabled. So don’t expect to get Apple’s Night Mode on your older iPhone models. In the pictures below, notice the difference in the yellow paint on the Willys Jeep. But it's the small tweaks the Smart HDR, the better selfie camera and the addition of a Night Mode that make the iPhone 11 Pro the absolute.Originally published earlier last month. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.I saw this post on a YouTube video about the new 11's - but they mentioned this NeuralCam app - aka Night Mode Camera.Yeah, I've tried it out, works great! From Normal mode (camera icon), swipe to the right and look for Slow Shutter Mode (aperture icon). As of now, the Night Mode is not available on the previous iPhone generations such as the iPhone 8, iPhone X and iPhone XS. At this time, there isn't a manual way to trigger Night Mode.Night Mode uses adaptive bracketing and takes a series of photos some with a longer shutter speed others with a shorter one.