Exposure Adjustment #53
benclewett
started this conversation in
Ideas
Replies: 2 comments 1 reply
-
|
This is a really interesting idea, especially as many astronomy students use this app. Thank you for suggesting, Ben. I have some spare time over the next couple of weeks and will look into it. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
0 replies
-
|
Perhaps there is something I can do. I cloned your project and have been
trying to learn some Swift. But it's somewhat different to the Java I
program for a job, so I didn't get too far, so far. But I might be able to
contribute something.
Ben
…On Fri, 20 Dec 2024 at 22:56, Simon Guest ***@***.***> wrote:
This is a really interesting idea, especially as many astronomy students
use this app. Thank you for suggesting, Ben. I have some spare time over
the next couple of weeks and will look into it.
—
Reply to this email directly, view it on GitHub
<#53 (comment)>,
or unsubscribe
<https://github.com/notifications/unsubscribe-auth/AC5Q7IIZR5UXR2XHM6USDAD2GSOB3AVCNFSM6AAAAABTTPDY2CVHI2DSMVQWIX3LMV43URDJONRXK43TNFXW4Q3PNVWWK3TUHMYTCNRTGQZDAMY>
.
You are receiving this because you authored the thread.Message ID:
***@***.***>
|
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
1 reply
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
Uh oh!
There was an error while loading. Please reload this page.
-
I've been using this app for teaching astronomy, using a CCD eye-piece in my camera. Which is brilliant. This suffers that bright object (Jupiter) dominate and you can't see dim objects (Jupiters Moons) in the same shot. I would dearly love the ability to push/pull the image a few stops to try and expose more details. (That or Dynamic Range.) I don't know if the API allows this, but it would give this app a whole new audience.
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
All reactions