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iOS 7 gets revamped photos app
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A little bit of organization can go a long way — especially when it comes to pictures and videos.
That seems to be the theme for the improvements coming to iOS 7’s Photos and Camera apps, with new features to help rediscover the photos you’ve already taken and make it easier to snap ones in the future.
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Photos app
Given how many people seem to use their smartphones as their primary camera, it’s amazing how lacking organization is within the iOS Photos app, which is basically just a never-ending folder of photos and videos.
With iOS 7, Apple is introducing iPhoto-like groupings to make it faster and easier to surface pictures and movies. You will now be able to better view them based on time and place with Collections, Moments, and Years. Each Year holds a Collection and each Collection is broken down into separate Moments.
For iCloud users, Apple will introduce new features for shared photo streams. These streams currently let you share photos with the family and friends you choose, but with iOS 7, they’ll be able to share stuff in your stream as well. For example, say you go on a vacation and you share a stream of your photos, others can now add their shots of the vacation to your stream. Everyone involved can comment on what is shared, and everything is automatically updated on everyone’s iOS devices.
Other updates to shared streams include the capability to share videos as well as a new Activity view giving you one location to see the latest updates from all your shared streams.
The fresh new look of Apple iOS 7 (pictures)
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Camera app
Tired of hunting through the camera interface to shoot stills, video, or panoramas? Well, with iOS 7 you’ll be able to just swipe through your options. New to the mix is a square (1:1) format, so not all of your photos have to be wide-screen (16:9) shots.
You’ll also be able to swipe through a list of new filters — before you shoot — so you can see what your final result will look like before you shoot. You’ll also be able to apply filters after the fact as well as remove those you shot with to view the original, untouched photo.