The Canon EFS 60mm macro is a GREAT lens and investment ! also useful for portraits - plentiful used and not expensive .....
I have this same lens for my Canon. It is very nice and useful. I've been doing more shooting with it lately to get better with it. Good choice for a macro lens.
I have recently been experimenting with Topaz Denoise AI myself and have been very happy with the results. I have some cave pictures that have a lot of noise in them. It takes it all out!
SD cards aren't subject to magnetic fields that would be generated from the Tesla. It would require a voltage to change the state of the data on the card.
If it’s saying it needs portioned, then it’s probably already corrupted and you may have lost your files. See if you can try it on another machine and still get the prompts about partitioning.
Have you tried to look at it using the Computer Management console in Windows?
The HP Instant ink program will actually turn off your ink cartridges if you cancel the program and still have ink left, because that's their ink. It's almost like renting ink, in a way.
In a pinch I purchased this cheap little printer to print Xmas letters planning to give it away when I buy a more professional printer. The ink cartridges that came with it ran out after about 25 letters so I purchased 3rd party replacements. They worked fine and were every bit as good as the originals. I got a note yesterday from Epson to update the firmware. Guess what? Now the printer doesn't recognize any of the cartridges. The slimy you-know-whats have intercepted the customer's ability to use 3rd party ink.
So if you are in a similar situation, don't update your Epson software.
In a pinch I purchased this cheap little printer t... (show quote)
HP does the same thing. They have chips in the cartridges now and if they change the firmware, it will disable 3rd party in a lot of the time.
The problem I have is that my saved images are in pixels and the contest to which I wish to send the image specifies "inches" (8" X 10") and I cannot find out how to convert from pixels to inches so I can reduce the size of the image when it is printed. Following a suggestion, I resized the image to 2400 X 3000 pixels but when I printed the resized image it came out 8 1/2"X 11", too large for the contest. I need a table of conversion that says "XXXX inches equals YYYY pixels" or vice-versa.
The problem I have is that my saved images are in ... (show quote)
If you have the photo setup for 8×10 in your software and it is printing at 8.5x11, then you have to change the print size in your printer setup. There is probably an option that says to fill the page that is turned on. When the recipient of the photo contest gets the image, they should know how to print it so that it comes out on the correct paper size. Just make sure its correct in your software before you send it.
I've never realized that this would come up. Depending on the camera brand, this could happen. Some cameras use a small laser to delete the files. This burns a small hole right through the memory card. One can see this because the laser actually illuminates a small clear plastic window. One needs to examine the card with an electron microscope to see this small hole. Eventually, if done often enough, the card resembles swiss cheese. This is not the system used by a lot of cameras, but some. The best way to tell is to erase a file and then immediately open the access door to the card and give it a sniff. If you smell something burning, that's the little bit of smoke generated by the process. --Bob
I've never realized that this would come up. Depen... (show quote)
I have never in my life heard of a small laser in any type of digital media device. It is using electricity to perform the read/write operations that are occurring on the SD card.
In a computer hard drive, your data will be written sequentially. When you delete a file, it Mark's that space as free. The next time a file is written to the HD. It will look for the first available open space and file in that area. If that area isn't large enough to accommodate the file that is being written, it will move to the next available open space. Eventually, this will lead to a "thrashed" hard drive which means that the head will be jumping around to find the next segment of the file on the hard drive.
Just got my Canon EFS 60mm 2.8 Macro USM lens and wanted to try it out.
It was getting dark out when I spotted this little guy on the clothes line. It was a little hard to see to focus, so I got mostly his legs in focus. I had to use the flash, otherwise you wouldn't see him at all. Hope you enjoy it. Be sure to download it to get the full effect.
I have heard of people taking a RAW image and then layering it with 3 or more different exposure settings ( like making your own manual bracketing). I haven't tried this technique myself, but it would solve the issue of a moving subject. It's the same image with different exposure settings. Is that still a thing?