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Google Messages may soon solve your dark viewfinder struggles

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Why This Matters

Google Messages is introducing Low Light Boost for its in-app camera preview, enhancing visibility in dim lighting conditions without affecting final photo quality. This feature aims to improve user experience by making framing easier in low-light environments, especially on supported devices. It reflects Google's ongoing efforts to add more useful features to its messaging app, balancing hardware and software solutions for better usability.

Key Takeaways

Joe Maring / Android Authority

TL;DR Google is working to incorporate Low Light Boost for the Google Messages in-app camera preview.

The feature brightens the viewfinder in real time to aid framing in dimly lit scenarios.

However, Low Light Boost does not affect the final photo quality, as it only affects the camera preview, not the output image.

Google has been gradually adding features to Google Messages over the years. Just last month, Google finally added a Trash folder to Messages, and we’ve even spotted more customization options in the works. We’ve now spotted one more feature in Google Messages’ pipeline: Low Light Boost for the in-app camera preview.

Low Light Boost is an Android feature that brightens the real-time camera stream in apps. Low Light Boost works instantly on camera previews in the app, unlike Night Mode, which improves final image quality but requires the user to hold still for a bit. Both features can be used together to achieve the best results.

Google says that Low Light Boost automatically adjusts the amount of brightening needed based on available light, so it is optimized for every environment. The feature is important as apps often need to brighten up the camera preview to help users actually see what is in the frame before capture.

Low Light Boost demo on Instagram's in-app camera preview

There are two ways to implement Low Light Boost on Android devices: Low-Light Boost AE Mode: This is a hardware-level auto-exposure mode. It delivers the highest quality and performance by directly fine-tuning the Image Signal Processor (ISP) pipeline. Google notes that apps should prioritize this. It is supported on devices running Android 15 or later and requires the OEM to have implemented support in the HAL (currently available on Pixel 10 devices). Google Low Light Boost: If the device doesn’t support the AE mode, apps can fall back to this software-based solution (HDRNet) provided by Google Play Services. It applies post-processing to the camera stream to brighten it. This is an all-software solution that is available on more devices.

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