Meet Alex Alex has been working as an iOS developer here at Polaroid for a little over two years. Back at university, he found that his course in computer science wasn’t quite moving as quickly as he would’ve liked, so he turbocharged himself by reading books and watching tutorials. Fast forward and Alex is now working on improving our apps – his favorite project thus far has been pimping out the Polaroid iOS app with photo editing tools. He also codes in his spare time too – and not just coding, he’s a jack-of-all-trades who designed, developed, tested and published his own app for tracking finances. He couldn’t find one that suited his needs, so he just made one instead. Check it out here: https://lnkd.in/e7bMNrgE When not behind a screen, Alex loves to skateboard. At least three nights a week he’s outdoors skateboarding through the streets. Despite being able to clear 12 stairsteps at a time on his skateboard, he still claims that most of the time he’s just trying to avoid breaking any bones.
It is not an issue with my Samsung Galaxy S9. That one behaves as one would expect with the color slider set to 0 yielding a black-and-white image. Black-and-white is not at all possible with the iPhone version of the Polaroid Lab. only normal or an increasing amount of green. iPhone 14 Pro. Up-to-date
Congrats and good luck with you finance tracking app! I like the idea that it only stores all the info locally!
Hi Alex. Are you able to fix the iPhone version of the Polaroid app's "green hue glitch" withe the Lab? I posted on Reddit about this and multiple people have also experienced this issue.
Financial professional with Green background
5moMessing with the exposure slider doesn't cause the glitch at all, but the color slider does. If the color slider is at zero, there will be no green tint when I place the phone over the pedestal; everything will be perfect. But as soon as you go above 0, it starts to have a green hue when placed on the pedestal. The higher you go from zero the green or the tint. And at 100, the tint is super green. It causes heavy vignetting. It took me most of a pack till I realized that if I have it set to zero, it won't cause the glitch and the pictures come out good. I thought 0 would be completely desaturated at first and 50 would be balanced, but nope. Anything above 0 partakes a green hue. Why green of all colors? It is evidenced in the screenshots at 67 and 100 in the previous comment.