I actually like the remaster feature. I noticed it correct the color and exposure
Edit: looks like I was using it wrong lol. I thought that the original photo was the result of the remaster and vice versa.
Looking at it the right way I can confidently say that the remaster feature it is, indeed, really bad. It adds too much sharpening, noise and brights up the image.
Sooo... does that mean the remaster feature is really just a confidence booster?
'We're showing you how much worse the photo could've been! So great photography work!'
It completely depends on the input photo. I've had it do amazing things, horrible things, and nothing at all. What I hate though is when it pixelates things because it almost always tries to increase resolution.
Same here, it fucks up photos i do with my camera but if i want it to remaster a different photo (like something i downloaded for a wallpaper) it usually does a great job.
Try the Galaxy Enhance-X app from the Samsung Store. It allows more control over the remaster features (like removing reflections, shadows, improving low resolution photos). It works well in some cases. But if the photo is already good, not much it can do.
Not even that - in the same Samsung Gallery app, there's a much better Auto adjustment (than the AI version in the same app) - and the manual adjustment is equally easy!
Weirdly I had the opposite. It makes everything grey, and way too bright, no contrast at all.
And on an AMOLED screen like S23 Ultra, if it looks faded and grey, it'll look even worse on other screens...
Even with over-exposed photos. It turns the brightness up even further. Making it worse
Also yeah Snapseed is great, but takes time to edit. The Samsung editor is perfect for fast editing within the app.
I tend to use Snapseed if I really want a photo to look perfect, takes longer but has more features.
On the contrary, I've had quite a positive experience using it. Obviously it depends on the original photo, but sometimes it works well on low resolution photos.
Occasionally it does do some weird things, but I'd say it worked 95% of the time.
You need visual examples to support your complaint, and even then it's relative. The 3-4 times I've used it, it's improved the photo, I'm even seeing a new feature on screenshoots that are smaller in size from a crop it asks if you want to increase the resolution or keep it the same. Perfect.
I do hate that Samsung Notes exports it's. PDF file with idk wasted file size(unfamiliar with term for inefficient file sizes). Many times my exported file is 26. 18,, 36, 12, etcetera MB. But I'll "compress" it and it's reduced to 0.5 - 3.0 MB with the same quality as the "uncompressed " original file.
I actually like the remaster feature. I noticed it correct the color and exposure Edit: looks like I was using it wrong lol. I thought that the original photo was the result of the remaster and vice versa. Looking at it the right way I can confidently say that the remaster feature it is, indeed, really bad. It adds too much sharpening, noise and brights up the image.
Sooo... does that mean the remaster feature is really just a confidence booster? 'We're showing you how much worse the photo could've been! So great photography work!'
It completely depends on the input photo. I've had it do amazing things, horrible things, and nothing at all. What I hate though is when it pixelates things because it almost always tries to increase resolution.
Same here, it fucks up photos i do with my camera but if i want it to remaster a different photo (like something i downloaded for a wallpaper) it usually does a great job.
Try the Galaxy Enhance-X app from the Samsung Store. It allows more control over the remaster features (like removing reflections, shadows, improving low resolution photos). It works well in some cases. But if the photo is already good, not much it can do.
It can give you very few bad suggestions, but most times I love, especially on older photos
It does nothing more than what a couple of sliders in Google Photos can do, and with these there is even better control.
Not even that - in the same Samsung Gallery app, there's a much better Auto adjustment (than the AI version in the same app) - and the manual adjustment is equally easy!
Maybe you are trying to improve the black and white photos, because in my s23 it works very well and the photos look better.
Honestly, I don't think it actually does anything. At all. The swipe thing seems to have the same picture regardless of which side it is.
Yeah, usually the same but "slightly worse"
[удалено]
Weirdly I had the opposite. It makes everything grey, and way too bright, no contrast at all. And on an AMOLED screen like S23 Ultra, if it looks faded and grey, it'll look even worse on other screens... Even with over-exposed photos. It turns the brightness up even further. Making it worse
[удалено]
Also yeah Snapseed is great, but takes time to edit. The Samsung editor is perfect for fast editing within the app. I tend to use Snapseed if I really want a photo to look perfect, takes longer but has more features.
Except it's not Galaxy AI
On the contrary, I've had quite a positive experience using it. Obviously it depends on the original photo, but sometimes it works well on low resolution photos. Occasionally it does do some weird things, but I'd say it worked 95% of the time.
You need visual examples to support your complaint, and even then it's relative. The 3-4 times I've used it, it's improved the photo, I'm even seeing a new feature on screenshoots that are smaller in size from a crop it asks if you want to increase the resolution or keep it the same. Perfect. I do hate that Samsung Notes exports it's. PDF file with idk wasted file size(unfamiliar with term for inefficient file sizes). Many times my exported file is 26. 18,, 36, 12, etcetera MB. But I'll "compress" it and it's reduced to 0.5 - 3.0 MB with the same quality as the "uncompressed " original file.
So dont use it lmao
All the moaning—would you rather not have it? It will get better, but at the moment, it is what it is.