The iPhone 16’s Camera Control feature arrived to mixed reviews, including from me. But iOS 18.2 upgrades the feature in several key ways, making it what it was always meant to be.
Visual intelligence unlocks a new camera superpower
The biggest change coming to Camera Control in iOS 18.2 is visual intelligence.
By long-pressing Camera Control, your iPhone’s camera can launch in a special mode that provides key information about the world around you—and shortcuts to take action on that info.
Here’s how Apple describes it:
Users can click and hold Camera Control to pull up the hours or ratings for a restaurant they pass, add an event from a flyer to their calendar, quickly identify a dog by breed, and more. Camera Control will also serve as a gateway into third-party tools with specific domain expertise, like when users want to search on Google to find where they can buy an item, or to benefit from ChatGPT’s problem-solving skills.
My colleague Fernando made a video outlining 10 distinct uses for visual intelligence. I highly recommend checking it out to see what’s coming to your iPhone 16 in iOS 18.2.
Faster camera launcher than before
Another key upgrade in iOS 18.2 is that you can use Camera Control to launch the Camera app faster than ever before.
By visiting Settings ⇾ Display and Brightness you’ll find a new toggle for Camera Control: ‘Require Screen On.’
iOS 18.2 defaults to this toggle being on, which makes Camera Control work like it always has. But if you switch it off, you’ll be able to launch your camera even when the iPhone’s display is off.
Basically this removes a step and lets you capture an image faster. No more needing to press Camera Control once to wake your device and a second time to launch the Camera (or tapping your display first to wake it).
Just grab your iPhone, press Camera Control and your camera will be ready to go.
More new features and settings
iOS 18.2 also introduces a two-stage shutter feature like Apple demoed back in September.
Inside Settings ⇾ Camera ⇾ Camera Control, there’s a new AE/AF Lock toggle.
Enabling this means a light press on Camera Control will lock both focus and exposure, so you can press lightly to lock those details in, then press harder to actually take your photo.
There’s also a new option in Settings ⇾ Accessibility ⇾ Camera Control to control the speed of a double-click action. You can choose from three options: Default, Slow, and Slower.
On that note, maybe in iOS 18.3 Apple can consolidate all of the Camera Control settings into one screen? I’ve already named three different places you have to go to find these various settings.
iOS 18.2 Camera Control wrap-up
Camera Control in iOS 18.2 is the feature Apple clearly wanted to ship with the iPhone 16, but was unable to. It makes the new dedicated button a lot more useful than before, such that it actually becomes the killer feature it was meant to be.
Have you been using Camera Control in iOS 18.2? What do you think of the changes? Let us know in the comments.
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- ESR MagSafe Car Mount for iPhone
- AirPods Pro 2 (currently just $189, discounted from $249)
- Anker 100W charging brick for fast charging
- New Apple MagSafe charger 2m
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