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Forum Discussion
KRichardson
3 years agoHelpful | Level 6
Offline videos on an iPad are washed out (too much white)
The original source taken with an iPhone is fine. Playing (streaming) from the iPad app is fine. When I select the file to be available "offline" the quality is bad - blindingly "white" - like the download is corrupt. Then I delete the offline file, and it still looks bad until I restart the app. Then the streamed version is fine again. Any ideas? I've deleted and re-installed the app twice, thinking maybe it was the installation. I've deleted and re-downloaded the files multiple times and it happens most of the time (I've had one or two go okay). My iPad is up to date. My app is up to date.
Problem solved (well, not solved, but understood). It is an iPhone 12 problem in the video creation that causes problems on some hardware:
No, the video problem is an iPhone 12 flaw, and only Apple can fix it. It’s apparently one of several quality issues with the iPhone 12 (see tinyurl.com/43wgwtoy and tinyurl.com/1duwio5q).
The culprit in this case seems to be a video recording setting called “HDR” (high dynamic range) on the iPhone 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max. HDR gives a high-definition boost to each of the iPhone 12’s three choices for video recording quality.
At its maximum setting, the iPhone 12’s HDR produces what video enthusiasts call “Hollywood-quality video.” Apple describes it as “Dolby Vision” at up to 30 frames a second, which can “capture true-to-life color and contrast.”
However, the iPhone 12’s HDR appears to be incompatible with either the screen displays or the HDR software on many earlier Apple devices (see tinyurl.com/ymxy5cb6). While iPhones are supposed to automatically reduce the quality of incoming video to a level they can play, that doesn’t always happen (see “compatibility issues” at tinyurl.com/k2vte0u4). As a result, when HDR videos from an iPhone 12 are viewed on some iPhone and iPad models, they appear either washed out or the wrong color (usually blue-green.)
Unfortunately, the best temporary solution for iPhone 12 owners is to turn off HDR video until Apple fixes the compatibility issue. Without HDR, iPhone 12 videos should be compatible with other iPhones and with iPads. To turn off HDR video recording on an iPhone 12, owners should go to “settings,” choose “camera,” then select “record video.” They will then be given the option to turn off “HDR video.”
From this article.
https://biztimes.biz/tech-qa-iphone-12-videos-washed-out-on-some-iphones-ipads/
- KRichardsonHelpful | Level 6
I just tested the same thing on the iPhone in the app and the problem doesn't show up. So hoping for a fix as watching on my phone's small screen isn't ideal.
- MeganDropbox Staff
Hi KRichardson, I'd be happy to help!
You mentioned your iPad and the Dropbox app are both up to date, so I assume you use iOS 16 and the Dropbox version is 298.2.2, right?
What type of files did you notice this behavior with? Can you also send us a couple of screenshots of how your files preview normally in the app, versus when you make them available offline?
Let me know more, and we'll take it from there!
- KRichardsonHelpful | Level 6I am on the most recent Dropbox 298.2.2 and the most recent for my older iPad Air w (15.7). I don’t see how to add a picture to this post from my phone and can’t seem to copy-paste - will try from my computer.
- KRichardsonHelpful | Level 6
Problem solved (well, not solved, but understood). It is an iPhone 12 problem in the video creation that causes problems on some hardware:
No, the video problem is an iPhone 12 flaw, and only Apple can fix it. It’s apparently one of several quality issues with the iPhone 12 (see tinyurl.com/43wgwtoy and tinyurl.com/1duwio5q).
The culprit in this case seems to be a video recording setting called “HDR” (high dynamic range) on the iPhone 12, 12 mini, 12 Pro and 12 Pro Max. HDR gives a high-definition boost to each of the iPhone 12’s three choices for video recording quality.
At its maximum setting, the iPhone 12’s HDR produces what video enthusiasts call “Hollywood-quality video.” Apple describes it as “Dolby Vision” at up to 30 frames a second, which can “capture true-to-life color and contrast.”
However, the iPhone 12’s HDR appears to be incompatible with either the screen displays or the HDR software on many earlier Apple devices (see tinyurl.com/ymxy5cb6). While iPhones are supposed to automatically reduce the quality of incoming video to a level they can play, that doesn’t always happen (see “compatibility issues” at tinyurl.com/k2vte0u4). As a result, when HDR videos from an iPhone 12 are viewed on some iPhone and iPad models, they appear either washed out or the wrong color (usually blue-green.)
Unfortunately, the best temporary solution for iPhone 12 owners is to turn off HDR video until Apple fixes the compatibility issue. Without HDR, iPhone 12 videos should be compatible with other iPhones and with iPads. To turn off HDR video recording on an iPhone 12, owners should go to “settings,” choose “camera,” then select “record video.” They will then be given the option to turn off “HDR video.”
From this article.
https://biztimes.biz/tech-qa-iphone-12-videos-washed-out-on-some-iphones-ipads/
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