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To: Swordmaker

Again not sure what you’re talking about I have the Galaxy S5 and Kitkat 4.4.4 and my SD card works as expected and works pretty damn fast not like a floppy at all. Buy a fast micro SD card and it’s not slow like you are purporting. Hell, I can take burst shots with my camera in the S5, (Does the Apple even offer burst shots on it’s inferior camera?) and the SD card has no trouble keeping up. Try again with the Apple delusion...


54 posted on 01/13/2015 6:56:51 PM PST by Blue Highway
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To: Blue Highway
Again not sure what you’re talking about I have the Galaxy S5 and Kitkat 4.4.4 and my SD card works as expected and works pretty damn fast not like a floppy at all. Buy a fast micro SD card and it’s not slow like you are purporting. Hell, I can take burst shots with my camera in the S5, (Does the Apple even offer burst shots on it’s inferior camera?) and the SD card has no trouble keeping up. Try again with the Apple delusion...

Speed has nothing to do with it. I NEVER said it was as "slow" as a floppy drive" I said it was not as fast as the type of RAM connect to the logic boards in an iPhone. It isn't. It can't be. it's not the same kind of memory. the issue is how is it formatted and how is the data stored and accessed. Security has everything to do with it. FAT32 does not offer security or user control. Some of the Android vendors added the functionality back in, but it is not officially part of Android anymore as Google has removed support.

I just love how you ignorant, non-iPhone users tell us iPhone users what our devices can and can't do. You are one of the worst offenders.

Using Burst Mode on the iPhone 5s

Up to 999 photos can be taken in a single burst. Recent interface improvements make it easy to choose the best photos from a burst group before discarding the rest to free up storage space.

Initiating burst mode requires no prior setup. Simply open the Camera app, frame your shot, and hold down the shutter release button. This works with the on-screen button and the volume buttons. Rapid fire captures will start, with matching sound effects and a frame count displayed on the screen. In the example above, 8 separate photos were taken in under a second.

Releasing the button saves the burst group to the camera roll. After all of the action shots have been recorded, it's time to sift through and see what's worth keeping. Navigate to the Camera Roll by tapping the photo thumbnail in the lower left corner of the screen. The burst group will appear with the number of photos included.— Source: iPhoneFAQ.com

The camera on the iPhones are considered the best cameras on any phone when all features are considered. . . and results are included. Are you serious about burst mode? Of course it does. It takes VIDEO and in fact can do 240 frames per second VIDEO, or super-slo motion video. That is the ultimate burst mode. . . and can do it direct to a connected Mac if you like. Try that with an inferior Android phone camera. . .

By-the-way, many Android cameras with burst modes cannot save to SD cards—the option is actually grayed out—because the SD card memory is too slow to keep up!. . . and even if you buy a fast SD card, unless you root your phone, it is STILL grayed out, and the burst photos can only be saved to system memory.

55 posted on 01/13/2015 9:32:53 PM PST by Swordmaker (This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users contnue...)
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To: Blue Highway
(Does the Apple even offer burst shots on it’s inferior camera?)

If you think the iPhone camera is "inferior", try reading this thread about an iPhone camera review by an ANDROID PHONE camera user, Blue. . .

56 posted on 01/13/2015 11:14:35 PM PST by Swordmaker (This tag line is a Microsoft insult free zone... but if the insults to Mac users contnue...)
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