Thanks Pat. That was her and I found the post.
Dave
Windows movie maker. Free (assuming your on a windows machine). You probably have to download.
Easy to use. Plenty of tutorials, online.
There was a post a while about about a member who hung her framed pictures on each other using screw eyes and hooks. I had thought I bookmarked but apparently not. I tried to search to no avail.
Anybody have the link or remember who posted?
Either is an excellent choice. The differences between the two are slight. The T2i is a little smaller, lighter, and have a faster start up time. The T3i has the articulated screen.
http://snapsort.com/compare/Canon-T3i-vs-Canon_EOS_Rebel_T2i
Very cool. Thanks for sharing.
rpavich wrote:
photo guy wrote:
Shooting photos of the accident scene itself is fine but not the people involved especially when the emergency personnel get there.
?
What do you mean "but not the people involved especially when the emergency personnel get there"?
I had the same question (about emergency personnel). In all my years in the fire service, I have been photographed and filmed on several occasions. Most of the time unaware but it was hardly a thought.
To the OP, you were probably well within your rights (not familiar with you local laws). I'd have been polite...at first.
Let me add that you should post some of your pics here (well not here, but in the appropriate thread) and let the pro's here pick them apart. Advice given is usually good. Sometimes it can sting a little but no pain, no gain.
your a Mac so I don't know what software is available, on my PC, I use a freeware program called syncback. At a specified time every day, it backs up specified folders to two additional hard drives. It also has a backup now function so I can make immediate backups if desired. It will also sync folders too.
bigcoz, I think designpro was referring to Gary's reply. I'm with you as I tend to use evaluative most of the time, spot for isolated subjects. I don't think I have ever used the other two. I also check the histogram after each and adjust as necessary.
Yep. Years ago. I run a DJ business and lost music, contacts, contracts, etc. Now my system is stupid redundant. Main hard drive for applications only. 2nd hard drive for content (music, photos, docs, video, etc). 2 external hard drives that automatically back up every day.
I also use dropbox to sync my two lappy's to my main computer (for DJ'ing).
http://www.luminous-landscape.com/tutorials/understanding-series/understanding-histograms.shtml
I'm not looking at you...
While not addressing your original question, you should also consider a stand alone hard drive or an online backup storage option (I prefer the former). If something were to happen to your computer your pictures could be lost forever. I don't know too many people that have NEVER had a hard drive crash.