Thanks! I've never noticed anything different ever upon opening, I've just now updated, but will start looking for the cloud icon.
Thank you, Bill. I am wondering how you knew this. Shouldn't we all be getting a notification of some kind?
Thank you! Crossing my fingers that the Oly will not be too hard for me to learn how to use. I have read comments online regarding an almost overwhelming number of customization options.
Everyone, I have landed on the Oly. I do appreciate all your time to help me out! Such great info!
Kuzano, thank you. I think I've decided on the Oly!
What an awesome reply. Thank you so much for explaining it to me. I was reading an article online that said to shoot birds with a 4/3 at F11 and I was wondering why -- now I know. Great explanation of everything.
Not TMI! Thank you so much for your informative response!
cdouthitt, those eagle images were fantastic!! Thank you for sharing. Who could possibly need anything more than this.
I think my PP skills are quite good. I have LR and PS and know my way around.
Thanks for providing these image samples. They are great, but do they look a little soft? Or maybe it's just that it's an upload. Has uploading softened them up or were they looking just like this?
Do you know why my question is not on the "main photography discussion page"? I don't think anyone else can see it hmmm. I posted the question last night.
OMG! If I could get these shots I'd be so happy! The main reason I am not interested in the 300 prime is because I've sometimes had birds land RIGHT next to me while out in the woods and I'm afraid the 300 would be too close. So out of the two cameras I mentioned, are you saying the one sensor is larger than the other? If so, which one?
I'm a little confused about sensor size. I'm looking at a Sony RX 10 IV that has a "1.0 CMOS sensor" having 20.1 mp and also the OM-D E-MI 11 having a "high speed 20 mp Live MOS sensor." What is the difference here? To me the main things that matter are light weight and image quality. The Oly is a bit more expensive and I get that I can put different lenses on it, but I really just want this camera for birding and sports action and would buy the 75-300 zoom and leave it on always. I have my Nikon dslr for everything else. Can someone clear this up for me? Thank you!
Thank you, everyone. I did the experiment with the YouTube link posted above. I used a tripod and took images in both live view and me pressing the shutter with a 2-second delay. Live view was perfect and with me pressing the shutter showed that the lens is back-focusing. As a further experiment, I put on my 50 mm 1.8 and it was perfect both ways. The lens is brand new, the camera 3 yrs. old. I am just going to send the 35mm back and stick with my 50mm. It's just that it's a little tight for indoor shots.