As AI and image processing continues to redefine photography, it's becoming harder to tell when a photo is truly a photoβor something else entirely. Companies like Google, Samsung, and Apple are pushing tools that tweak, merge, and alter your images with ease. But with these powerful features, one question arises: Is the final image still a photo or something entirely new?
Halide, the beloved iPhone camera app, is challenging this trend with its new βProcess Zeroβ feature. This update removes all AI and heavy processing from the photo equation, offering a return to basics. Instead of automated enhancements, Process Zero delivers raw, natural outputβsimilar to what you'd get from a camera from decades ago.
Halide has always offered control over how images are processed, whether using the standard iPhone processor or Appleβs ProRAW. Process Zero takes this a step further by capturing a simple 12-megapixel image as a RAW DNG file without any post-capture processing. This means faster captures, perfect for fast-moving subjects.
Lux Optics, creators of Halide, likens this to shooting on film: you might get color quirks or grain, but the trade-off is a more organic, untouched image. Their comparisons highlight how much processing typically happensβsometimes improving clarity but also losing natural texture. Whether you prefer a fully-processed or raw image is a matter of taste.
Halide isnβt rejecting AI; itβs offering photographers more choice. With Process Zero, you start with the most natural version of the scene, free of digital manipulation, and can decide later how you want to edit it.