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Back in the saddle again
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Central TX west of Houston
Posts: 56,950
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Quote:
Originally Posted by 911 Rod
Yes! I've taken pictures with my phone just to zoom in and read the type.
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Quote:
Originally Posted by red-beard
I do this all the time.
Actually, that one time when I had an iPhone
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https://9to5mac.com/2016/09/26/how-to-use-ios-10-magnifier-magnifying-glass-iphone/
instructions as follows, but if you follow the ^ link ^, there's even pictures.
Quote:
There is a little known feature included in iOS 10 called Magnifier. It essentially turns your iPhone’s camera into a magnifying glass of sorts with a custom UI specifically for easier reading.
It’s hidden in Accessibility settings, as the feature was designed for users with vision impairment. Here’s how you can enable it.
1. Enable Magnifier in Settings
Open the Settings app
Tap ‘General’, then the ‘Accessibility’ tab
Tap ‘Magnifier’ and tap the toggle to enable it
Optionally tap the toggle for Auto-Brightness to enable automatic brightness and contrast adjustments based on ambient light while using Magnifier
2. Triple-click home button to activate Magnifier
Once enabled, you can now open the Magnifier from anywhere with a quick triple-click of the home button, including from the lock screen.
3. Snap a freeze frame, zoom-in, lock focus and turn on the flash
The Magnifier UI is a customized camera UI that lets you snap a freeze frame with the circular button in the middle.
You can zoom-in easily using the onscreen slider or by swiping up the screen before after snapping a shot. You can optionally turn on the flash if you need extra light by tapping the small lightning bolt icon in the bottom left corner.
Tapping on the display or the padlock icon in the bottom left corner will lock the focus.
You can also adjust colors…
4. How to invert & adjust colors
After you snap a freeze frame and zoom-in, you can adjust colors by tapping the small icon in the bottom right-hand corner.
That will present you with a different UI that gives you controls for brightness and contrast with onscreen sliders, the ability to invert colors, and a few presets like Yellow/Blue, Grayscale, White/Blue, etc (pictured above).
The feature was designed for those with vision impairments, allowing for easier reading of labels and other small text that might otherwise be difficult to read, and officially arrived in iOS 10 alongside a handful of other new Accessibility features.
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__________________
Steve
'08 Boxster RS60 Spyder #0099/1960
- never named a car before, but this is Charlotte.
'88 targa  SOLD 2004 - gone but not forgotten
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06-24-2019, 12:15 PM
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