The author mentions that the issue is present both on 16 Pro Max and 17 Pro Max. When I upgraded to 17 Pro Max from my 14 Pro I noticed it too, even thought I might've gotten a defective camera unit. I think it all boils down to a different lens with a different focal length.
Apple applies a really heavy-handed text-enhancing algorithm by default. I first noticed this with the iPhone 16 - in an Apple Store, if you took a picture of the product card sitting on the other side of the table at a specific distance, it would turn into complete hierogyiph-looking gibberish.
That is reproducible with any iPhone. I went back when the iPhone 17 was released and got the exact same result. Only enabling Apple ProRAW in the Pro phones resolves it. I showed it to the Apple employee next to me the first time and they were just as puzzled.
It seems to help with clarity on small letters and the kind of background text you'll usually find in city pictures, which is what most people care about - but I find the results very poor, especially, as the author mentions, compared to older phones.
It just looks not focused to me. Dude needs to check which lens hes using and check if he has macro mode enabled. Hes using a 17 pro max shouldnt have any problem. The iphone air doesnt do focusing close so taking pics likenthat needs distance
Interesting the first comment on the post suggesting a Android phone. Ironically I went the other way and switched to an iPhone because it did a better job of text than my pixel 6 or 7 due to spherical aberration scanning receipts and I got fed up. Then stuck with the ecosystem. I guess grass is just always greener on the other side from small compact cameras and optics on these devices. Best solution seemed to be 2x zoom with a bit of distance.
The author mentions that the issue is present both on 16 Pro Max and 17 Pro Max. When I upgraded to 17 Pro Max from my 14 Pro I noticed it too, even thought I might've gotten a defective camera unit. I think it all boils down to a different lens with a different focal length.
Apple applies a really heavy-handed text-enhancing algorithm by default. I first noticed this with the iPhone 16 - in an Apple Store, if you took a picture of the product card sitting on the other side of the table at a specific distance, it would turn into complete hierogyiph-looking gibberish.
That is reproducible with any iPhone. I went back when the iPhone 17 was released and got the exact same result. Only enabling Apple ProRAW in the Pro phones resolves it. I showed it to the Apple employee next to me the first time and they were just as puzzled.
It seems to help with clarity on small letters and the kind of background text you'll usually find in city pictures, which is what most people care about - but I find the results very poor, especially, as the author mentions, compared to older phones.
Not any; it only started doing so fairly recently, at iPhone 12 or so.
It just looks not focused to me. Dude needs to check which lens hes using and check if he has macro mode enabled. Hes using a 17 pro max shouldnt have any problem. The iphone air doesnt do focusing close so taking pics likenthat needs distance
Interesting the first comment on the post suggesting a Android phone. Ironically I went the other way and switched to an iPhone because it did a better job of text than my pixel 6 or 7 due to spherical aberration scanning receipts and I got fed up. Then stuck with the ecosystem. I guess grass is just always greener on the other side from small compact cameras and optics on these devices. Best solution seemed to be 2x zoom with a bit of distance.