Camera FV-5 is a professional camera application for enthusiasts, power users, professionals, and everyone in-between. Features a modern and fast camera experience that puts DSLR-like manual camera controls at your fingertips.
Supports switching to any rear and front cameras, with manual controls for every camera.
With 10 composition grid overlays and 9 crop guides, combinable with each other.
Fast and simultaneous capture in JPEG and DNG formats, for complete flexibility in post-processing.
Zoom with pinch gesture, by using the shutter button as zoom rocker or use the volume keys!
The exposure compensation is always available by swiping on the viewfinder.
Many options like shutter, zoom, exposure, white balance or camera switching are assignable to the volume keys.
is a sharp addition as the pragmatic venture capitalist, representing the "other side" of the startup world.
Set seven years after the first season, the story finds Naveen, Yogi, and Saurabh at the helm of . They are no longer the underdogs working out of a garage; they are CEOs and founders dealing with board meetings, venture capital pressures, and the ethical compromises required to keep a company afloat. The central conflict revolves around a massive potential merger and the internal friction it creates between the founders' original vision and the demands of their investors. Key Highlights
: At times, the heavy focus on technical business jargon and board-room politics might feel dense for viewers who enjoyed the lighter, more relatable struggles of Season 1. Final Verdict
Take photos with multiple different exposures automatically.
New in version 5Now supports instantaneous capture even with JPEG+DNG on thousands of devices!
Capture picture series at regular intervals automatically (for instance timelapses or slow moving scenes)
is a sharp addition as the pragmatic venture capitalist, representing the "other side" of the startup world.
Set seven years after the first season, the story finds Naveen, Yogi, and Saurabh at the helm of . They are no longer the underdogs working out of a garage; they are CEOs and founders dealing with board meetings, venture capital pressures, and the ethical compromises required to keep a company afloat. The central conflict revolves around a massive potential merger and the internal friction it creates between the founders' original vision and the demands of their investors. Key Highlights
: At times, the heavy focus on technical business jargon and board-room politics might feel dense for viewers who enjoyed the lighter, more relatable struggles of Season 1. Final Verdict