A bride-to-be discovers a reality-bending mistake in Apple's computational photography

A U.K. woman was photographed standing in a mirror where her reflections didn't match, but not because of a glitch in the Matrix. Instead, it's a simple iPhone computational photography mistake.

AppleInsider
@appleinsider isn't this basically the same as rolling shutter?
@igormaka @appleinsider You could do something like this with a film camera. Most of the time, the shutter is fast enough you wouldn't notice, but it could be done.

@igormaka @appleinsider for me, it is like that.

Or a different example would be bracketing? which is more similar to what the iPhone is doing - taking a lot of pics, so it can then automatically compose the final shot. Photographers already do this by "manually" (or with separate and automated tools) mixing the pictures together

@igormaka @appleinsider I thought it was going to be something like what samsung was doing with the moon and using AI to get images elsewhere to add to the photo.

But this is just exaggeration

@igormaka @appleinsider no it’s the built-in Pano feature. The headline/first paragraphs of the article don’t make that clear, but it’s just the iPhone capturing the image in segments from left to right when you pan the camera, and the subject moving while you’re doing that.