Can you confirm that pictures look better if enforcing less gain (noisy, but sharper)?
In short:
Confirmed. Locking the Gemini camera to ISO 400 (or below) in low-ish light, tends to give darker pictures, but with better focus more often.
Auto ISO in low light. Brighter, but blurrier. This is not motion blur, as the Gemini was supported and the picture was taken with a delay.
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ISO400 in low light. Darker, but sharper. Look, for example at the word "KEYS" in the "iRig KEYS" logo.
More detailed: In light such that the automatic ISO setting goes past 400, the camera apparently becomes less than able to correctly focus the image. In such light, if I lock the sensitivity to 400 (or lower), I get darker pictures, and longer exposure (beware of motion blur), but the camera now seems much more able to correctly focus the image. If I, instead, lock the sensitivity to 800 or 1600, I get the same kind of out-of-focus pictures as in auto mode, but it isn't as simple as high ISO = blur, because if I have plenty of light, such that the automatic ISO setting would have stayed below 400, and I still lock the sensitivity to 800 or 1600, to get shorter exposure times, I still get photos with correct focus.
So, it seems that in good light, the Gemini camera can handle high ISO values, but not in low light, where it would be needed the most. My guesstimate is that in low light, the raw image gets rather noisy and cranking up the ISO amplifies that noise further, such that heavier noise reduction gets applied, which I think is the real problem here. While the focus algorithm looks for contrast, the noise reduction, trying to average out noise, softens the image to a point where the focus algorithm can't tell if it is in focus or not, and thus fails. Perhaps the camera driver could limit the ISO and bypass the noise reduction while looking for focus, and then, with the focus locked, turn up the ISO if needed, engage the the noise reduction and shoot the image. There could be reasons as to why that wouldn't be feasible, or maybe the precise problem is somewhat different.
Either way, if this can be worked around, I guess it must be done in a low lever driver, so I guess it isn't something Planet Computers can do themselves, but would have to defer to SuperPix (who makes the camera hardware), who then may or may not actually bother.