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How Long, Oh How Long
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Dec 14, 2019 07:44:09   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
trapper1 wrote:
CHG Canon, I tried the Nikon shutter count app you listed but it did not work, I kept getting a "Failed" message. I have a Nikon DSLR 5600 and the images are stored in my computer in a Nikon program. I did notice that the program called for a JPEG image and that the images stored in the Nikon folder in my computer are listed as JPG images. I did not know that there was a difference. Also, in a line of instructions above the "Failed" notice it said that the image was too small. I resize all of my images to something such as 640X480 as that size has always been acceptable for posting images on the various websites that Iuse. Any idea as to what this problem may be and/or how to correct it?

Thanks.
CHG Canon, I tried the Nikon shutter count app you... (show quote)


Take a new test image this morning and upload the new 'xxxxxxxx.jpg' image file straight from the camera to the website.

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Dec 14, 2019 10:46:57   #
Malco
 
Silverrails wrote:
Yes, how long will it be before DSLR Cameras become extinct. They say Sales are falling for Nikon & Canon, How long before only Mirrorless Camera will be the only choice in town. If we need repairs done, where will we go,...Japan? Thailand? Indonesia? We might as well move on to the new Technology, but how long will that last?
Well I am not sure what the Shutter Count is on my Nikon D3300, but I hope it is low.😳🙄🤔😣


What makes you think DSLRs will go away. I think mirrorless is just a fad that will go away in the next few years. Mirrorless have no advantages over DSLRs except size which is not that great of an advantage. In my opinion the only thing that will keep mirrorless around is if they are cheaper to produce and camera companies can charge more.

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Dec 14, 2019 12:46:30   #
burkphoto Loc: High Point, NC
 
Malco wrote:
What makes you think DSLRs will go away. I think mirrorless is just a fad that will go away in the next few years. Mirrorless have no advantages over DSLRs except size which is not that great of an advantage. In my opinion the only thing that will keep mirrorless around is if they are cheaper to produce and camera companies can charge more.


I can and have posted seven pages of advantages of MILCs here. I’m not knocking dSLRs — I used SLRs and dSLRs for 45 years. But none of them serves my current needs.

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Dec 14, 2019 12:52:31   #
Malco
 
burkphoto wrote:
I can and have posted seven pages of advantages of MILCs here. I’m not knocking dSLRs — I used SLRs and dSLRs for 45 years. But none of them serves my current needs.


Other than size, which is debatable, name 1

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Dec 14, 2019 13:50:29   #
dat2ra Loc: Sacramento
 
A few months ago, I "had" to make that exact choice which wasn't very hard. D850. I love it. It will dance on my grave.

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Dec 14, 2019 13:51:43   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
If you can't afford to go full-frame and mirrorless, you can't afford to go from good to great.

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Dec 14, 2019 14:29:56   #
Rational1
 
CHG_CANON wrote:
If you can't afford to go full-frame and mirrorless, you can't afford to go from good to great.


And, if everyone is being honest, most of us already have cameras that are far more capable than we are.

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Dec 14, 2019 14:48:05   #
ronpier Loc: Poland Ohio
 
You are probably so correct for most of us.

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Dec 14, 2019 14:55:08   #
Rational1
 
(and my case my camera is smarter and better looking also)

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Dec 14, 2019 15:15:26   #
TheSkipper
 
My oh My. No offense but I started with a 4×5 Speedgraphic then a medium format Hasselblad, then a Leica M2 35mm.
The list goes on and on. Now I carry a 5D Mk III and love it. What ever comes I'm ready.

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Dec 14, 2019 16:32:44   #
burkphoto Loc: High Point, NC
 
Malco wrote:
Other than size, which is debatable, name 1


Have fun. I apologize for the rambling nature of this, but it's edited from 7-8 of my previous posts.

I used Canon and Nikon gear for 45 years. Then I switched from both to Panasonic. Here's why:

There is no *viewfinder blackout* at the moment of exposure. You have a choice of what happens at the moment of exposure —€” continuous live view, or image review.

The camera requires *no noisy mirror* that gets out of focus alignment. Fewer moving parts mean better reliability and less vibration/sharper images.

There is *no fan-like mirror to knock dust and goo onto your sensor.* (There is less air movement in a mirrorless camera during exposure. Mirrors blow bits of metal and lubricant and mirror-dampener foam dust all over the place. The sensor may be exposed when the lens is off, but a quick lens change is less likely to spot the sensor than the dSLR camera's own deteriorating mechanisms.)

There is *no flippy-floppy mirror to make noise.* Because there is no mirror, the shutter can be, but does not have to be, "electronic" —€” essentially, the camera makes a COMPLETELY SILENT video frame grab.

The removal of the mirror allows engineering a shorter lens flange to sensor distance. This improves wide angle lens designs and performance, and allows mirrorless bodies to mount lots of different dSLR and cine lenses, via adapters.

The EVF, lack of a mirror, and silent electronic shutter allow low light stills and video work in a theatre by not distracting others with noise or a dSLR's rear-of-camera live view LCD.

The EVF can show you the effects of manual exposure changes. It displays what a processed JPEG image will look like, so you can make menu adjustments on the fly and generate files for truly immediate use.

The EVF can be used for most or all of the tasks that the separate OLED or LCD screen on the camera is used for. It can display several different sets of information, including a live histogram, audio meters for video, full exposure data, a level, and much more than a dSLR can include.

You can see an image in the EVF in far dimmer light than with an optical viewfinder. The EVF is always clear and bright.

You can focus and meter with smaller maximum aperture lenses than are possible to focus and meter through with a dSLR. The EVF can compensate for the smaller aperture during composition.

"Pixel shift" schemes allow still life compositions with four times the resolution, by recording four images sequentially and combining them. 80MP raw from Micro 4/3?!?!

The camera can *buffer a stream of continuous frame grabs,* so that when you press the button, it saves the last 15 frames or so before the button press, plus a lot of frames after you press it. Then you may scroll through the buffered images and pick the one(s) you want to save to the memory card. That lets you pick peak action or peak expression.

Many of these things can be done *after exposure*€ on a dSLR, but the EVF allows feedback before, during, and after exposure.


Why I use Micro 4/3:

On a purely practical level, you should make tests to determine whether any given piece of gear, and/or a given *system*, will meet your needs.

For most of what I do, for instance, Micro 4/3 absolutely suits me best. I record lots of video with important, single-system, onboard audio, and I record lots of stills. The results are most likely to wind up on smartphones, tablets, computer screens, projection screens, TVs, and video monitors. Still photo results may also be viewed as PDF files, or printed to letter-size documents. I rarely print larger than 20x16 inches.

I don't use a full frame or APS-C dSLR, because there are not enough AV options available at a reasonable price. I could use a few other mirrorless cameras. Sony could work well, but it would mean spending twice as much and carrying a much heavier and bulkier kit that would yield an insignificant difference in the work I do. And I HATE Sony’s menus.

But... for LANDSCAPES, a full-frame or even a medium-format system would be much better than m4/3 or APS-C, especially for making large prints (30x20 or 60x40 inches). Even though the *€œstandard*€ viewing distance for any print is 1x to 1.5x its diagonal dimension, more pixels and more details allow closer inspection. Joe Public probably won't notice, or care. But the format nazis at your local camera club probably will!

Panasonic Lumix Micro 4/3 high end:

The G9, the GH4, GH5, and GH5s series, and the GX9 have a great "feel in hand."

The Leica lenses (8-18, 10-25, 12-60, 50-200, 100-400, 12, 15, 25, 42.5, 45 macro, 200 f/2.8…) are spectacular. So are the 12-35mm f/2.8, and 35-100mm f/2.8 weather-sealed Panasonic Pro lenses, and the 30mm f/2.8 macro.

The menu and general working ergonomics are quite likable, especially among those coming from Sony and Olympus models. They are most familiar to Canon users.

That said, it's hard to find a bad camera these days. Six sigma quality is a given. The manufacturers have carefully carved out their individual niches in the market, with varying blends of features catering to different users' needs. Study reviews carefully and compare feature sets with your needs and wants.

The MAJOR advantage of Micro 4/3 is that it is the ONLY camera format (other than Nikon's now-defunct, much smaller, and electronically noisier 1 series) that saves you a lot of weight when you put a complete system together. You can save 2/3 to 3/4 the weight over an equivalent full frame system, and 1/3 to 1/2 the weight over an equivalent pure APS-C or DX system ("pure" means you don't buy full frame lenses for APS-C cameras).

The other MAJOR advantage, for me, is that Panasonic, in particular, has spectacular video. I use a Lumix GH4 for filmmaking.

The Lumix G9 records even better video than my GH4, but because of its lesser audio features, it is aimed at still photographers. The G9 competes nicely with the Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark II. Each has a few goodies the other doesn't have. Check out online reviews (http://www.dpreview.com and YouTube are great places to start). Menus and ergonomics are entirely different.

The GH5 (like the GH3 and GH4 before it) is made specifically to record the best balance of video plus stills. It is a Swiss Army Knife of hybrid photography.

The GH5s is the most filmmaker-centric. It disappointed bloggers, because it does not have IBIS, but leaving out IBIS was intentional, because IBIS won'€™t work in jarring run-and-gun situations (chase scenes, safari video from the back of a Jeep, etc.). It disappointed still photographers, too — The GH5s has HALF the MP count of the GH5. But that means it records much less noise in low light video… for performance comparable to full frame bodies. It also has Dual ISO (400 and 2500 are both considered '€œnative'€). It is meant to be a low-light complement to the GH5, primarily for videography.

My GH4 (and most other models I mentioned) can be COMPLETELY silent, when used in electronic shutter mode. I used it in a dark theater one night to make over 300 exposures without disturbing other patrons.

Over 100 native Micro 4/3 lenses are available —€” http://hazeghi.org/mft-lenses.html

On the downside, the best Micro 4/3 cameras (except for the GH5s) have about two f/stops less light-gathering ability than full frame cameras, and about one stop less light gathering ability than APS-C and DX cameras, when you compare cameras of the same age and similar megapixel counts. That's just the laws of physics.

ISO 3200 on Micro 4/3 is about as noisy as ISO 12,800 on an FX (full frame) Nikon, or ISO 6400 on a DX (APS-C) Nikon, which is to say all three are pretty useful up to those points.

For video, ISO 6400 is still usable on Micro 4/3, because motion hides some of the noise in most situations. (You can see this equivalence for yourself by comparing the test charts. Go to this review of a Nikon D5 (https://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikon-d5-pro-dslr-review/6) and Compare raw at ISO 12,800, with raw at ISO 6400 on a Nikon D500, and raw at ISO 3200 on both a Lumix G9 and a Lumix GH5.

If you are an extreme sports and wildlife photographer, I would *rent to try before you buy* (good advice for anyone in any situation, actually). But know that the Micro 4/3 system you build today will still be viable in the future. Each generation of camera body is more and more advanced, and brings with it a wave of new lenses to take advantage of it.

Panasonic is great about updating the computer firmware in its cameras and lenses, not just to fix bugs, but to add new features, improve performance, ensure compatibility, and match some of the features of its other new models. So the camera you buy today will get better over time, provided you download and install the new firmware updates. Firmware on G9, GH5, GH5s, S1, and S1R was last updated 11/19/2019.

There are two fisheyes at 8mm in the Micro 4/3 world. One is by Panasonic, while the other is by Olympus.

Leica engineered an 8-18mm f/2.8-f/4 zoom for Micro 4/3. If you need the rough equivalent of a Canon 16-35mm, that's it. Olympus has a 7-14mm f/2.8 zoom, and Panasonic has a 7-14mm f/4 zoom, too. None of these zooms is a fisheye.

So whether you come to Micro 4/3 from Canon or Nikon full frame gear, you can find an equivalent for most of your lenses. "€œ35mm equivalent field of view" focal lengths exist from 14 to 800mm (7-400mm actual focal lengths on m43). Again... http://hazeghi.org/mft-lenses.html

About Audio:

The one area where dSLRs'€™ and some mirrorless cameras'€™ video features fall far short is AUDIO.

About 60% of what we perceive from most video is in the soundtrack. Yet most of these dSLR/MILC cameras have:

> truly awful microphones that pick up camera handling noises and aim upwards
> microphones that will almost never be close enough to the subject to yield a decent signal-to-noise ratio (i.e.; closer than three feet)
> no headphone jack
> automatic gain (record level) control that can'€™t be defeated
> no manual audio level controls
> no level meters
> no switchable peak limiters
> no line level input
> an unbalanced mic input that limits noise-free cabling to about six feet
> noisy mic preamps

Accordingly, to get around this, use an external digital recorder/mixer at 48KHz sample rate, along with external microphones. Then sync the sound in Final Cut Pro or Premiere (etc.), using (then muting) the reference track from the camera to match the good audio wave forms in the timeline. OR, just buy a Lumix GH5, GH5S, or S1H (full frame) camera.

What I DO, and how Video fits into it:

I am a training content developer. I use a Lumix GH4 for about equal amounts of still and video photography.

I used to have a Canon EOS 50D and a Canon GL2 SD video camcorder. Using both was sequential, confusing, and slow. Traveling with both was expensive and tiring! Excess baggage charges added up quickly. Gear security, and going through airport security, were always worrisome.

Now, everything I need is in one bag that fits under an airplane seat. And if I record 4K, I can extract very nice stills from the video to use in printed and PDF manuals. So now, much of what I do takes half the time.

Since I grew up with SLRs in my hands, I actually PREFER that form factor for video. I had six different video cameras or camcorders from 1982 to 2012. For the work I do, I don'€™t miss the features of any of them.

Maybe if I were making Hollywood movies, an ARRI Alexa, or a Red Epic, or even a Black Magic Cinema camera would make sense, but for simple storytelling, training, documentaries, and film festival entries, my GH4 is fine.

If you don'€™t think professionals can do good work with cheap cameras, look up the film, *Sriracha*, by Griffin Hammond, free on Amazon Prime. It'€™s won several awards. It was filmed with the older Lumix GH3.

On my Panasonic Lumix GH4, I tend to use 1/25 or 1/50 second shutter speed for 24 fps cinematic video. Outdoors, I use an ND64 for six f/stops of light reduction. For late in the day or cloudy days, my ND8 (minus three stops) is good.

The slow shutter speed allows some motion blur from frame to frame, which is what makes film action look smooth. The wide aperture allows better isolation of a subject from the background. 1/25 is very dreamy looking; 1/50 is more realistic.

Yes, you can use higher shutter speeds, but the video will look jerky at 23.98 or true 24 fps.

Three formats, six manufacturers:

Canon and Nikon are just now entering the professional and ADVANCED enthusiast full frame mirrorless world. They are about ten years later than pioneers, Panasonic and Olympus. The discontinued Nikon 1 System (1" class sensor) worked fine, but it was aimed at fashion-conscious travelers. The Canon M series (APS-C) got off to a rocky start. The current models are fine.

Fujifilm is known for its medium format (larger than full frame!) and APS-C cameras. If you want spectacular JPEGs from your camera, look at Fujifilm's XT-3 first. Fujifilm lenses are mostly spectacular. The cameras are solid and reliable. Their 50MP medium format sensor is cleaner than Canon's 50MP full frame sensor, so if you need that...

Sony makes APS-C and full frame mirrorless bodies. Their menus can be complex, but they have quickly become a top supplier of cameras, period. Sony makes the sensors in nearly all other cameras except for Canon and Fujifilm. Check out the A9, A7rIII, A7III, a6500...

Olympus is known for excellent lenses and clever engineering. The Pen FT is a rangefinder-like fashion statement that is a joy to use for street photography. The OM-D E-M1 Mark II is jam-packed with cool features that make it extremely useful in a wide variety of situations.

Panasonic is known for excellent lenses, great ergonomics, intelligible menus, and video-centric engineering. I've noted why I use them above. Now they have three full frame models.

I do think dSLRs will be with us for years to come. Their market share will fade, but they still have advantages for certain types of photography that, until matched by mirrorless bodies, will make them viable. At the current moment, only Sony makes a model (A9) that challenges the top Canons and Nikons for fast action, low light sports, and wildlife still photography.

I could go on, but that's enough to chew on for now.

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Dec 15, 2019 06:17:39   #
Collhar Loc: New York City.
 
Rational1 wrote:
And, if everyone is being honest, most of us already have cameras that are far more capable than we are.


I think you are somewhat spot on. I ordered while at recent camera show in NYC a new Sony. I plan on doing a lot of reading and take a lot of pictures.
On the front cover of one of Bryan Peterson's books he states; "How to take great pictures with any camera" he is a very prolific author, lecturer and professional photographer.

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Dec 15, 2019 06:19:06   #
Collhar Loc: New York City.
 
Brucej67 wrote:
Nikon still manufactures the F6 at a ridiculous price and how long has digital been available (F6 is a film camera for those who don't know).


That would be me. Thank you.

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Dec 15, 2019 10:25:42   #
Tomcat5133 Loc: Gladwyne PA
 
My take in decades of owning different kinds of imaging and tech equipment for graphics
is that their are to many DSLR's and their lens out there. So we will have some support and
future sales their is so much equipment throughout the world.

As I mentioned in another post tech and imaging has changed radically in the last 40-50 years.
I had an AV company large slide shows and all the equipment. The day the slide projector wasn't
being made anymore I was shocked. Eventually after trying to donate all this to charity
and education I would up having all the old Mac's slide projectors audio equipment picked
up by a tech junk guy.

But I didnt get rid of my camera's camcorders etc. Eventually the camcorders were obsolete
and I did keep the film cameras like my Nikons. I would look at the once a month at their
quality and my experiences.

Because a Nikon 850 does not require film It can be used for years and have make downloads
with cards. The lens will probably have the Koreans create wonderful ways to use them with adaptors.
Their Rokinon video lens allowed me to have a video shooting rig with a Sony a7s II. Looked like film.

For some reason the love of cameras and the history is valuable to us. I will admit I post process
a lot for work and charity and a my image art. I really don't like it.
But that Nikon in my hand is still a wonder. My original Spotmatic set me on the road
along with the School of Visual Arts in NY.

Note; Not bragging just a fact. The many awards I won in advertising and graphic design
were for Art Direction. Never for Photography. Which has been a part of my life since I was 20.

PS One last thought ebay has been great to sell and use for upgrades in equipment.

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Dec 15, 2019 10:27:42   #
CHG_CANON Loc: the Windy City
 
The naysayers see failure in every opportunity. The successful buy a new camera.

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