I think I've decoded part of Apple MakerNotes 0x000c.
It contains two floats.
The first appears to be the estimated subject distance.
I don't know the purpose of the 2nd float.
I've been playing with the depth of field, hyperfocal distance, and other related calculations.
I've been looking at the "The Double the Distance Method" for determining the hyperfocal distance from the focal point. Or more specifically, going the other way around. It's easy (ahem, kinda, approximate) to find the hyperfocal distance from the available EXIF metadata. I've been dividing the hyperfocal by half to approximate the distance to the focal point when it isn't known. This works well-enough for lots of cameras, but not iPhones.
With my iPhone, I've been using a measuring tape to determine the distance from the camera to the subject. The first float in Apple 0x000c appears to be that distance in meters (+/- a few centimeters).
One more note: The value will be wrong if the picture was scaled by the iPhone's photo editor.
Phil is currently away until next week, so it will be some time before he can check this out.
I figured out the purpose of the second value in Apple 0x000c!
Apple doesn't provide a distance to subject.
Apple provides a focal RANGE!
Sometimes it's "Apple 0x000c: far near", other times it is "Apple 0x000c: near far". But it's definitely the range.
I think (suspect) that the ordering depends on which lens is used.
The iPhone has two lenses -- one for close shots and the other for long shots. Depending on the lens that is used, the order may swap.
Great, thanks! ExifTool 12.43 will support reading this.
- Phil