mardi 13 mars 2012

[apple-iphone] Camera+ Sees Major Update: Dozens Of Features, New API, Integration With Wor...

 

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Sent to you by Bill Boulware via Google Reader: Camera+ Sees Major
Update: Dozens Of Features, New API, Integration With WordPress,
Foodspotting & More via TechCrunch by Sarah Perez on 3/13/12

Following increasing competition, most recently from SmugMug's nifty
Camera Awesome app, everyone's favorite iPhone camera replacement app
Camera+ is rolling out a major update today. There are a ton of new
features in version 3.0 of the app, including speed improvements,
multiple photo import, better sharing options, and more, but the
biggest change isn't really a consumer-facing feature at all – it's an
API.

Starting today, developers can integrate Camera+ into other apps or
create web services that make use of the photos shared by the app's
millions of users. According to Camera+'s maker, Lisa Bettany, several
developers are already integrating Camera+ into their apps using the
new APIs, including WordPress, Tweetbot, Twitterific, Foodspotting and
Twitterlator Neue.

For those unfamiliar (Android users?), Camera+ is the 10th best-selling
paid iPhone app of all-time, and it recently shipped its 7 millionth
copy. The app serves to replace the iPhone's built-in camera with a
number of additional options for editing and sharing photos.

With Camera+ version 3.0, which rolled out a day earlier than expected,
there's a long list of improvements, including the following:

- A new app icon: The first thing you'll notice is a new app icon,
which is basically just a more polished version of the old one.
- Better sharing: You can now share to multiple services, or multiple
accounts on the same service, all at the same time. Sharing is also
much faster than before.
- Multiple photo library import: You can now import multiple photos
from your photo library all at once. The import panel also now include
large thumbnails, zooming to view your photo large, and photo info.
- Workflows: New workflows let you either shoot a lot of photos in a
row, without worrying about editing and sharing, or you can choose to
edit and share each picture right after you take it.
- Focus & exposure locks: With this feature designed more for
photographers, you can now lock the focus and exposure of the camera,
independently of each other.
- APIs: There are a few, new comprehensive APIs for Camera+. The first
part of the API is web widgets, which lets you add the photos from
Camera+ to your own website. Next, there's the app integration API for
iOS. This one allows app developers to integrate Camera+'s high-quality
photo shooting, editing, and sharing in their own iOS apps. Finally,
there's the web sharing API.
- Improved Lightbox UI: In Camera+ 3, the Lightbox has been reworked to
be more usable. The company warns it will "take a couple of seconds" to
get used to the new Lightbox.
- Create web link: This improved to the Message feature (SMS sharing)
aims to be even easier.
- Tuned Clarity: Clarity is one of the app's standout features. This
improvement makes clarity even better, with specific tweaks just for
the iPhone 4S
- VolumeSnap setting in menu
- Status bar in Lightbox: In previous versions, the iPhone's status bar
is now visible.
- Improved performance: The app's performance has gotten a boost, and
is more fluid and faster.
- Notifications: Opt-in notifications can now alert you to update info,
news, and about contests.
While this feature set will definitely have everyone hitting up their
App Store app today to grab the update, the most interesting change is
the Camera+ API. With some nearly 600,000 iOS applications, offering
other developers the option to integrate Camera+ into their own
applications will lead to even more usage and visibility. Not only will
Camera+ be able to serve as the photo-taking interface within other
non-photography focused apps like Foodspotting, it will also allow
developers to include Camera+ users' photos as an option in apps
related to social sharing, like those Twitter apps, for example,
mentioned above.

More than that, it positions Camera+ as a service, instead of just a
utility. And that, in turn, means it could one day take on the default
photo-sharing services like Flickr and Photobucket, if the company
chose to do so. After all, where do most of your photos come from
today? Your phone! Wouldn't it make sense for the service that manages
your online photos be built from the ground-up for mobile photo
sharing? Camera+ isn't discussing its future plans in this arena, but
it seems like an obvious next step for the company as the mobile
photo-sharing market continues to grow.

The updated version of Camera+ went live in iTunes this morning.




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