Light Meter is a Photography application developed by WBPhoto, but with the best Android emulator-LDPlayer, you can download and play Light Meter on your computer.
Running Light Meter on your computer allows you to browse clearly on a large screen, and controlling the application with a mouse and keyboard is much faster than using touchscreen, all while never having to worry about device battery issues.
With multi-instance and synchronization features, you can even run multiple applications and accounts on your PC.
And file sharing makes sharing images, videos, and files incredibly easy.
Download Light Meter and run it on your PC. Enjoy the large screen and high-definition quality on your PC!
Download and install LDPlayer on your computer
Locate the Play Store in LDPlayer's system apps, launch it, and sign in to your Google account
Enter "undefined" into the search bar and search for it
Choose and install undefined from the search results
Once the download and installation are complete, return to the LDPlayer home screen
Click on the game icon on the LDPlayer home screen to start enjoying the exciting game
If you've already downloaded the APK file from another source, simply open LDPlayer and drag the APK file directly into the emulator.
If you've downloaded an XAPK file from another source, please refer to the tutorial for installation instructions.
If you've obtained both an APK file and OBB data from another source, please refer to the tutorial for installation instructions.
Fantastic. Really useful. My phone is about 0.5 of a stop off. Would be great to have a separate calibration setting, so that the plus/minus correction could just be used for working out placing the image in a particular zone etc, but hardly any inconvenience as is. A great app, love the spot meter zoomed in - super accurate. Other thoughts: if it could perform a screen grab to act as a reference, that would be cool for image review. Thank you for your work on this.
I feel like the spot metering isn't working for me on my Samsung Galaxy S8. I've tested it with high contrast lighting and it didn't show any change in Ev or other settings. Granted, I just started out with film photography, so I don't know much and hoped to find a cheap app to help me get the right exposure. Not sure how my pictures turned out yet. Edit: newest update does not fix the spot metering issue
Works pretty well. I've been using this for about 2 years now and on two different phones. It seems to be fairly accurate in bright - low light situations. It doesn't work super well for night shots though, but good enough. I have noticed that it gives different reading from my cameras light meters (Nikon FG20 and a Canon F1) but I've tested it and neither are wrong.