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3D CameraCurrent Version: 1.4.1 (iOS 4.0 Tested)

★ THANKS TO EVERYONE WHO DOWNLOADED OUR APPS DURING THE FREE WEEKEND. ENJOY! ★
★ For anyone having stability issues, we are unable to reproduce this with our test units. We'd appreciate an e-mail explaining how you encounter the issue so we can fix it in our next update. Thanks! ★
★ Check out 3D Camera Studio, our new app for iPad
★ Rated 4.5 out of 5 by Macworld - "3D Camera does its job and does it well"
★ Watch our 4-minute video tour:
http://bit.ly/3dcameratour
★ 3D glasses are NOT required, but you can get them FREE:
http://www.juicybitssoftware.com/faq/

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Create your own 3D photos and easily share them with friends on Facebook and Twitter. First, take left and right photos with the built-in camera or choose two images from your iPhone or iPod touch photo album. Then, view your 3D photo as a grey or color anaglyph (using common red/cyan 3D glasses), a stereogram (no glasses required), or as a wigglegram for a simulated 3D effect. Finally, send your 3D photo to your friends on Facebook and Twitter. It's as simple as that!

FEATURES:

- Enhanced camera that makes it easy to take two side-by-side photos
- Three different camera alignment modes
- Ability to send 3D photos to Facebook, Twitter, and e-mail
- Simple touch interface to realign and reposition images
- Magnification loupe for more accurate alignment
- Automatic cropping of re-aligned images
- Grey and color anaglyph creation
- Parallel and cross-eyed stereogram support for photos that don't require 3D glasses
- Wigglegram mode for a fun, simulated 3D effect
- Integrated instruction screen with "More" button to access an online video tour and additional documentation
- Button to swap the original photos
- App setting to choose the working image size (100%, 75%, 50%, 25%)
- App setting to enable/disable automatic saving of camera photos
- App setting to automatically boost saturation and brightness of Color and Grey anaglyphs
- App setting to control the size of stereogram borders (and to eliminate them)
- App setting to enable/disable stereogram alignment dots
- App setting to limit the maximum Twitter image dimensions (1024, 800, 640)
- App setting to select the color anaglyph method (full color, half color, optimized, and red/blue)
- App setting to bypass the introduction screen

Take a look at some of the sample 3D photos we've posted to Twitpic:
http://www.twitpic.com/photos/3dcamera

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NOTE:
Please do not leave bug reports in iTunes Reviews of 3D Camera as we are unable to respond directly to offer help or properly debug the situation. You can contact us directly at:

info@juicybitssoftware.com
or:
http://www.juicybitssoftware.com/contact/
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3D Camera Screenshots


3D Camera Review

App makes it easy to create stereo images, post them online

I admit it: I keep a pair of 20-year-old 3-D glasses I got from a comic book in my desk drawer. I brought them to work back in 1997 when the Mars Pathfinder rover started sending back crazy 3-D images of Mars and NASA started posting them all on the Internet. There’s a lot of cool 3-D photography out there on the Web (a lot of it astronomical in nature), and if you’re without your 3-D glasses you’ll miss it, not to mention being unable to detect when a Dalek invasion is imminent.

Juicy Bits Software’s $2 iPhone app, 3D Camera, threatens to bring the 3-D image back down to earth. With 3D Camera, it’s easy to create your own stereo images and post them online. There’s even a stereogram mode that allows you to view 3-D images without any special hardware at all.


Defocus your eyes and let the images drift together to view this stereogram as a single, 3-D image.

Using 3D Camera is straightforward, though its functionality is hindered by a limitation imposed by Apple. To take a stereo image with your iPhone, you must actually take two shots, both pointed in the same direction but with the perspective moved a couple of inches to the right, to mimic the distance between your right and left eyes.

What this means is that you must take a photo, then hold your iPhone steady as you tap the Use button to approve the image, then move the iPhone slightly, then tap the shutter button again. Apple has refused to approve a version of 3D Camera that uses an overlay effect to take the guesswork out of aligning your shots, and apparently Apple’s approved tools for developers also don’t allow you to take two pictures is quick succession. 3D Camera works around these limitations by allowing you to align your photos afterward, so that the same objects are in the same place in both images.)


To view this image, you'll need a set of stylish 3-D glasses.

Once you’ve snapped two images and aligned them, 3D Camera lets you generate output images in traditional red/blue anaglyph format, as well as the less common gray anaglyph format. You can also generate a stereogram, two side-by-side images that will appear three dimensional if you cross your eyes and allow the two images to drift together. (You’ve got to learn how to do it.) There’s even a “wigglegram” that quickly alternates between the two frames, giving you a hint of depth without actually being a true 3D image.

After you choose what format you want your 3D image in, tapping on the export button will allow you to send it to your Camera Roll for later syncing to iPhoto. You can also automatically post the image to Twitter or send it to Facebook, right from within 3D Camera.

3D Camera does its job and does it well. My only complaints are that it doesn’t upload to Flickr (the photo-sharing service I use), it’s not particularly friendly toward landscape images, and it’s too difficult to take two images that line up properly. The second factor is more the fault of Apple for not giving third-party camera apps more control over how pictures get taken. If Apple could give Juicy Bits Software just a little bit more of what it wants, 3D Camera would be perfect. As it is, it’s still pretty close.

3D Camera is compatible with any iPhone running the iPhone 2.2.1 software update.

[Macworld editorial director Jason Snell is a man of multiple dimensions.]

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