If you've ever taken a picture of something that looked just right only to find the image is blurred, slightly discolored, or otherwise not quite right, Rockshox Revelation User Manual is designed to ensure it doesn't happen again. The app is fairly straightforward in that it offers few additional features or editing options beyond the camera. When you open it, you can select the number of photos you want, how fast the images are taken, and where they are saved. You can then click the camera button to start taking images. The app, as promised, can take up to 300 images, at speeds up to 30 frames per second. But you can change frame speed as well as total pictures to alter the number taken. Because images are standard size, this is useful because a full 300 images are over 150MB of data instantly stored to your device. There are no editing features here, but exporting is easy and you can then search through the images to find what you need. If you want to ensure you get the perfect image for your next big event, this is a very useful app, simulating what expensive standalone cameras are able to do at higher resolutions. It's a free app, as well, meaning you can test it out before upgrading, or save it to use only when you need the extra security that your images will be perfect. Rockshox Revelation User Manual is designed to automatically detect and swap faces in images stored
on your device. The app works in many regards, but its facial recognition technology feels dated and often inaccurate, and there is no way to know which images it will work with and which ones it won't. As a result, there is quite a bit of trial and error, and because the process is automated, you can't change how the images are swapped. When you start Rockshox Revelation User Manual for the first time, you can choose an image from your photo library or take a new one. Like most face-swapping apps, it really only works
well if you have two subjects directly facing the camera in even lighting. Side shots, different shaped faces, and awkward poses often lead to distorted images or the app will fail completely, not allowing you to do the swap. This is a limitation of the technology, but without an option to see when it will happen or the ability to manually mark faces that similar apps offer, it can be frustrating to get the right image to work. When the app does work, however, the effect is fun and the images are rendered quickly. It manages to blur lines enough that the faces blend nicely into the other person. The effect is at times jarring, occasionally hilarious, and generally well presented, but again only when the original photo is the right size, distance, and shape, and in the right lighting. If you are interested in testing a free face-swapping app, though, this is a decent one to start wi
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