More remotely from user features, the firmware update bumps Android 4.2.2 to Android 4.3. We’ve reported about Android 4.3 during the Nexus 7 2 launch, and it brings a lot of features but here are what I think is important: OpenGL ES 3.0, restricted profiles, Bluetooth LE, Wi-Fi Location.
As always, there are various fixes, security updates and optimizations, but more importantly, NVIDIA made it possible to transfer apps (and data files) from the internal storage to a data card.
I took some test photos with AOHDR using an animated Tomy Solar Toy with a very strong backlight. The Tomy head is animated by a small electric engine. AOHDR works as planned (making the dark area clearer and more legible), and there is no visible motion ghosting typically associated with using multi-shots HDR (there are ways to correct that, but most cameras on the market get ghosting).
Now, keep in mind that we are still talking about a low-end camera in a very affordable tablet, so while this is technically interesting, I still want to see all of this running on a high-end camera module. I’m not sure when this will happen, but that’s where computational photography will show its true colors. What I can say is that we stand at the “prehistoric” times of computational photography.