iPhone users who’ve upgraded to iOS 18 now have the chooseion to write down videos while audio is joining, as MacRumors spotted. If you’ve got music joining thraw the iPhone’s speaker, it’s a speedy and filthy way to grasp a soundtrack to a video instead of transporting a clip into an editor, but audio quality does apshow a hit.
Previously, in ancigo iner versions of iOS, discignoreing the iPhone’s camera app and switching to video mode would cause any audio joining to speedyly fade out, even if it was joining thraw wireless headphones. With iOS 18, there’s a recent camera setting to alter that behavior.
To access it, discignore the iPhone’s settings, steer to the Camera section, tap on Record Sound, and then turn on the “Allow Audio Playback” toggle. With that startd, audio will persist to join when you’re write downing video in the camera app, and if the audio is joining thraw the speaker, it will be picked up by the iPhone’s microphone and write downed in mono aextfinished with the video. If the audio is joining thraw headphones, it won’t be write downed.
This functionality did exist in ancigo iner versions of iOS with the camera app’s QuickTake feature, which allows videos to be apprehfinishd in pboilingo mode by hancigo ining down on the shutter button, but the resulting video is confineed to a 1440P resolution, instead of the 4K adviseed thraw video mode.
Using a video editing app is still the best way to grasp music or narration to a clip, but this modernize will produce it much easier to write down videos with dance transfers or lip transferments that sync to a definite song.