QUOTE(gfx @ Sep 15 2010, 04:50 PM)
sure, learned the trick from an italian guy in youtube.
1: get this app from Maemo Testing depository : Tweak Flash Plugin Version
2: install it

3. from the application, you will see a few menus, click on the Android 10.1.61 Froyo and change it to Linux 10.0.45 Linux (recommended)
click change, done and close the apps. and you are done. sorry for the lame guide, maybe someone can make it better..
enjoy

errr.... thats not flash 10.1
Added on September 16, 2010, 6:24 amQUOTE(aspire2oo6 @ Sep 15 2010, 05:26 PM)
nice photo but at zoom noise quite heavy
its more like jpeg compression artifacts. nokia likes to over-compress and ruin everything for the sake of getting smaller filesize.
why they do it ? i have no idea.
Added on September 16, 2010, 6:36 amQUOTE(kk6513 @ Sep 15 2010, 07:00 PM)
shoot my lighter

FCam
you know instead of fiddling with FCAM, the camera jpeg encoding hack works fine too. less controls than FCAM but the results
can be just as good if you are shooting in a favourable environment.
sudo gainrootjust edit the file in any text editor like vi or leafpad
/etc/gdigicam/gdigicam-camerabin.conf-----------------------------------------------------------------------
[global]
useconfigfile=true
[videosrc]
element=v4l2camsrc
[imageenc]
element=jpegenc
quality=100------------------------------------------------------------------------
just change the bolded parts and uncomment imageenc if its commented using #
save & exit > reboot.
now your original nokia camera app will produce much larger jpg filesizes without compression.
some detailed photos that you take in good lighting using the original camera app can reach 3.5~4MB size.
you might ask what difference does it make ? well, its not raw output, but its uncompressed jpeg. with proper noise reduction software, e.g. Photoshop you can get good results.
nokia's default noise reduction causes the photos to loose much detail at 100% zoom and look like oil-painted canvas lacking details.
using software you can acheive better results and do selective noise reduction only that does not rob your photos of details.
This post has been edited by jananan: Sep 16 2010, 06:40 AM