Apple's upcoming iPhone 6S will reportedly feature an improved FaceTime camera with 1080p video recording capacity along with a front-facing flash for enhanced selfies.
In addition, support for 120fps and 240fps slow motion recording, panorama feature and improvements in viewing angle (reportedly 120-degree), have likely made their way to the selfie mode of the iPhone 6S camera app, according to iOS 9 code, discovered by developer Hamza Sood, as reported by SlashGear.
"iOS 9 is hinting at future device front cameras having: 1080p resolution, 240fps slow motion, panoramamic capture, flash," tweeted Sood, along with a screenshot revealing the iOS 9 support.
In case of the rear camera, rumors have it that Apple has come up with an amped-up 12 megapixel sensor with a dual-LED flash.
This is reportedly a major overhaul in front facing camera capability - from the current 720p video at 30fps, sans flash. The leaked features, if turns true will require an upgrade to at least a 2.1 megapixel front-facing camera from the current 1.2 megapixel camera, as suggested by Forbes.
Previous reports claim that the upcoming flagship smartphone will have an improved Home button. The device will come with gesture support and Force Touch technology - available on Apple Watch and new MacBooks. The iPhone 6s will allegedly be powered by an A9X quad-core processor coupled with 2GB RAM.
Earlier leaks also suggest that the Cupertino will completely scrap out the 16GB variant and have 32GB variant as the base starting with the upcoming iPhone 6S.
However, the report has to be taken with a pinch of salt as nothing is official as of now. Apple is yet to comment on iPhone 6S.