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Posts Tagged ‘Months’

Sony PRO Support is being extended 6 months for members, free of charge

13 May

Sony has informed DPReview that it will be extending its Sony Imaging PRO Support platform for all members for an additional six months due to the ‘current global situation.’

No press release was issued, but in an email shared with DPReview (embedded below) via a spokesperson, Sony says PRO Support members will have an extra six months of service added free of charge, immediately and automatically. These services include dedicated U.S. Phone support, expedited repair turnaround time, repair loaners, evaluation loaners, camera maintenance and more.

Sony says its PRO Support members ‘are among [its] most loyal customers [and it wants] you to know how much [it] values you being a part of Sony’s Imaging family.’

Email:

Sony PRO Support extended by six months for customers due to global conditions

As a PRO Support member, you are among our most loyal customers and we want you to know how much we value you being part of Sony’s Imaging family.

With the current global situation, we are taking steps to ensure we are supporting all of our customers during these difficult times. For all Pro Support members like yourself, we are automatically extending membership for an additional 6 months, free of charge.

As a refresher, your ProSupport membership includes:
– Dedicate US Phone Support Experts
– Expedited Repair Turnaround Time
– Repair Loaners
– Evaluation Loaner
– Camera Maintenance
– Terms & Conditions for the program applies to
o US members
o Canada members
We are here to support you via phone or email:
M-F 7AM PST to 5PM PST. Saturday 7AM PST to 2PM PST.
Phone: 866-470-7669
Email: ImagingProSupport@sony.com.
Thank you again for your loyalty and support.
All the best,
Sony Imaging PRO Support

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Instagram hidden-likes trial goes global after months of regional testing

16 Nov

After testing it across several regions earlier in the year, Instagram started hiding ‘likes’ for accounts based in the United States last week. Now, the Facebook-owned company has announced on Twitter it’s rolling the test out on a global scale.

The trial is part of an initiative aimed at making users focus on the quality of the content they are posting rather than on how many likes their posts are receiving. Those users included in the trial won’t see a like-count on other people’s images and videos, but can still see the numbers for their own posts.

Instagram says feedback on the trial so far has been positive but the company is aware that removing like counts constitutes a fundamental change to its platform and therefore is expanding the test to ‘learn more from our global community.’

It is also aware of the importance of like counts for some of its users, such as influencers who use followers and likes as a currency in sponsorship negotiations, and says it is ‘actively thinking through ways for creators to communicate value to their partners.’, without specifying yet what these ways could be.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Photographer finds fully-functional Fujifilm lens 4 months after losing it in the desert

20 Oct

Modern camera lenses are durable, but a little anecdote from Steve Boykin, writing for 35mmc, shows just how far weather-sealing has come in the past few years.

Four months ago, in June of this year, Boykin managed to lose his Fujifilm XF 23mm F2 R WR lens while on a hike in the wilderness. This week, he managed to stumble across the lens while out on another trek and after a bit of cleaning up, he says the lens is in seemingly perfect condition, even after withstanding the summer heat, countless thunderstorms and freezing temperatures.

The location where Boykin found the lens

Boykin says he was walking along a path he’s walked ’30 or 40 times over the last few months’ when he looked down and noticed the lens ‘sitting on the ground a few inches from my foot.’ Naturally, Boykin assumed the lens wouldn’t work, due to the harsh conditions it incurred, but after getting home and removing the front B+W filter and rear lens cap, Boykin mounted the lens to his Fujifilm X-Pro1 and ‘it came to life like nothing had happened.’

Despite there being some ‘slight discoloration’ on one side of the lens barrel (likely the side that was laying in the dirt) Boykin says the autofocus works ‘like nothing ever happened’ and both the aperture and focus rings rotate smoothly. Boykin credits much of the survival to the fact the front filter and rear lens cap were still attached, but even then it’s an impressive feat for the lens to survive a third of a year in the desert with essentially zero protection.

To read the full story, which includes a pair of photos captured with the lost lens, head on over to 35mmc (and check out their other coverage on all things film photography related).


Image credits: Photos by Steve Boykin, used with kind permission from 35mmc

Update (October 16, 2019): Updated the first sentence of the article as to better explain the current state of lens weather-sealing.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Amusement Parks to go to This Summer months months months

26 Jun

As summertime time approaches, quite a few vacationers pack up and head to a amount of of North America’s most well-known amusement parks. When hordes of thrill seekers head in to the domestic staples like Disney and Cedar Trouble, many of America’s best subject issue parks deliver different hours of spouse and youngsters entertaining with distinctive touches you will not routines within the mega-parks. Tourists in search of to improve up the Disney routine undoubtedly have to study out the subsequent amusement parks home page.

Indiana Seaside entrance front, Monticello, Indiana

Indiana Seaside entrance has every thing you can want along with the strategy park, which include things like thrilling rides also a h2o park, with distinct touches together with lake-front cabins and cottages, a boardwalk, in addition being a whole golfing schooling education class. In essence by far the most worthwhile portion is generally that Indiana beach is refreshingly affordable.

Knoebels, Elysburg, PA

Knoebels payments by alone as conventional subject matter make any difference park, showcasing free of charge of demand admission and fairly priced journey price ranges. This Pennsylvania strategy park has rides which will go on to help keep the many family and friends shoppers joyful, furthermore the park is harmless ample to permit additional mature tiny styles operate wild freely.

Storyland, Glen, New Hampshire

Nestled in New Hampshire’s White Mountains, Storyland will be the quintessential spouse or partner and youngsters amusement park. You’ll find much more than numerous sights for youthful youngsters, and almost all rides make certain it truly is feasible for additional mature individuals right now and kids to journey, so homes could potentially get satisfaction from jointly. Not similar to a large amount of overpriced matter parks, Storyland’s meals items and souvenirs are within your means.

The post Amusement Parks to go to This Summer months months months appeared first on Photonovice.

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Six Months with the Fujifilm X-T1

19 Nov

You have probably read about it. You may have a friend who bought one. You may have noticed it on the streets. You have most certainly seen one in a camera store window. The Fujifilm X-T1 is currently one of the most popular mirrorless cameras, and is the model that is persuading many people to leave their DSLRs, be they enthusiast or professional photographers. For the past six months, I have been using it in various situations to discover exactly why people have fallen head over heels for Fujifilm’s high-end model.

Six months x t1 DPS image 1

Dials versus menu system

I began using the X-T1 during a trip in April to Cinque Terre, Italy. The first aspects you notice about the design are its manual control dials inherited from SLR film cameras. (The X-T1 itself was inspired by the Fujica.) If you are familiar with film cameras, you most certainly already know this type of layout. If, like me, you mostly shoot digital, it is something you can learn to appreciate.

Most of the time I shot in aperture priority so I didn’t use the shutter speed dial much. The same went for the ISO dial, which I kept at 200 during the day and set to Auto with a limited maximum value in low-light situations. At first, these manual dials seemed more like a tribute to the past than something that could benefit my shooting.

Six months x t1 DPS image 2

Then, on the last day in the Cinque Terre, I decided to use the camera strictly in manual mode. That is where I started to appreciate the difference. Walking through the hills and coloured towns, I started to memorize the ideal settings for each situation. Normally I would check the metering on either the LCD or the EVF (electronic viewfinder) to see if the picture was under or overexposed but the more I used these dials, the more I remembered which shutter speed I had used in a similar situation.

Seeing your settings marked on physical dials rather than on a digital screen helps you remember them better. Once you get used to it, you will start to set your exposure even before composing your image. The advantage is that you can concentrate on your composition. It takes some practice but it is something you will enjoy once you gain confidence in your abilities.

Most Fujifilm XF lenses have an aperture ring. Used in tandem with the dials and sub-dials of the X-T1, you can change all the most important settings without ever having to check the LCD/EVF or dig into the Quick Menu.

The only complaint I have is that Fujifilm doesn’t physically mark the aperture values on all of its lenses. Some like the 35mm f/1.4 have them, but the XF 10-24mm f/4 I bought with the camera does not.

Portrait test

Six months x t1 DPS image 3

The second great moment I had with the X-T1 was in May when I tested the XF 56mm f/1.2 lens. I used it for a portrait session in natural light. This particular example helps me summarize the great image quality this system can deliver. The X-Trans APS-C sensor found in the X-T1 wasn’t something new to me because I had already used the X100s and the X-Pro1. What I like about this sensor is the colour palette rendition. The way in which the colours are reproduced is less digital in comparison to other cameras. They aren’t necessarily better; they are just different. They don’t exactly emulate film, even though Fujifilm likes to call its profiles Film Simulation Modes. My favorite is Astia/soft as it maintains a vivid tone but with softer rendering and less contrast.

During this portrait session, I also appreciated working with the ProNeg presets, especially now that they are included as camera profiles in Adobe Lightroom. This allowed me to use the RAW files and keep the original colours produced by the camera. I also love the delicate skin tone renditioning, and the vast dynamic range.

If you like cameras, you probably like lenses even more. Often the glass in front of the sensor is as important, if not more important, than the camera. Shooting with the 56mm f/1.2 showed me that Fujifilm cares as much about its cameras as it does lenses. The quality of Fuji’s primes is top-notch and I can understand why many photographers have started to use the X-T1 and 56mm combo for weddings and portraits. The gear is light, yet gives you quality that is as good as a DSLR system. My other favorite lenses are the 35mm f/1.4 and the 14mm f/2.8. The zoom lenses also deliver great performance, including the kit lens.

Autofocus

Six months x t1 DPS image 4

An aspect for which Fujifilm cameras have been criticized is the autofocus. When the X-Pro1 was released, it was slow but they gradually improved it with firmware updates. The X-T1 represents the best of what Fujifilm has to offer in the autofocus department at the moment. To test it properly, I shot bike races and a marathon in June with the 10-24mm f/4 and the XF 55-200mm f/3.5-4.8.

If you’ve ever tried shooting a marathon runner coming towards you with a long focal length, you’ll know just how challenging it is to keep him in the centre of the frame. Why is this important on the X-T1? Because even though it has continuous autofocus, it doesn’t include real autofocus tracking that is capable of following a subject within the frame like other compact system cameras and DSLRs. This means that you have to keep the AF point on the runner at all times. In general, I’ve found that the X-T1 works better in AF-C with a single large focus point and the 7.5 fps (frames per second) Continuous High shooting mode selected.

Overall, the camera performs really well for action photography. It passed the test for marathon runners, bike races and bike polo. It even worked at a contemporary dance rehearsal, a challenging low-light situation. In the end, it is simply a matter of understanding the best settings for the AF system and helping the camera with the composition.

Six-months-x-t1-DPS-image-5

In June I also used the X-T1 for a couple of events. For one of them, the opening of a new shop in Turin, I decided to take some shots by manually focusing with the 35mm f/1.4. I love this lens but being one of the first releases for the system, it also has the slowest autofocus speed. What’s more, while the AF-C is very efficient on the X-T1, I sometimes find the AF-S unpredictable, sometimes it won’t even lock in ideal shooting conditions.

Six months x t1 DPS image 6

Thankfully, the X-T1 possesses the best electronic viewfinder on a digital camera. The lag time is almost non-existent (0.005s), and the magnification is 0.72x, making it the biggest EVF on the market. If you wear glasses like me, you will find it easy to use, especially with the X-T1’s various manual focus assist options. You get the standard magnification and peaking, as well as two unique features called Digital Split Image and Dual Mode. The latter is my favourite because it displays a magnification of the focus area on the right next to the frame. It is the feature I found the most efficient when manually focusing with the X-T1. The EVF is actually so big with so much resolution (2.360k dots) that I often find myself manually focusing without using any of the MF assists.

Further testing and usage

By this time, I had already tested the most important aspects of the camera, so the following months were pure pleasure for me. I didn’t shoot much with it in July but my partner used that to her advantage and shot some architecture and public events in Turin.

Six months x t1 DPS image 7

I started using the X-T1 once again in August while on holiday in Wales and my impressions were no different than before; a simple, straightforward camera that is a real pleasure to use. During that month, I also experimented with long exposures and star trails, taking advantage of the clear night skies. Creating this kind of shot is very easy with the X-T1. If you want to try it yourself, I highly recommend the Triggertrap dongle for your Android or Apple device.

September was very busy between work and Photokina. I used the X-T1 to test some new Fuji lenses, and back home, it was my second body for a wedding. This brings us to the current month, the sixth I’ve had with the camera.

I’m going to be totally honest with you and say that my favourite Fujifilm camera is still the X100s. That said, I can understand why so many people are falling for the X-T1. It is Fujifilm’s most mature camera and a good example of how the X system, as young as it is, is evolving to perfection.

Cons

Are there aspects I don’t like? Yes, but they are minor complaints. Some buttons could have been bigger and easier to press, the grip is limiting with larger lenses, and the somewhat flimsy SD card door sometimes swings opens. The battery life could also be better, and when you mount a tripod plate, it blocks the battery door.

Updates and the future

One last point I’d like to make regarding the constant updates Fujifilm makes to its X series cameras. Have you ever experienced the satisfaction of returning to the same camera store and being treated with courtesy and attention because the owner recognized you as a returning customer? Well, with Fujifilm you get something like that via its firmware updates. Even for cameras that are more than two years old, you have the possibility to receive updates that enhance functionalities and add new features. At the end of the year, the X-T1 will receive a massive update that will bring a silent mode, electronic shutter, a new picture profile and better video capabilities, a weak point on all Fujifilm cameras. If you would like to own a camera that doesn’t grow old after six months, this is something extra that Fujifilm does very well indeed.

Six months x t1 DPS image 8

 

The post Six Months with the Fujifilm X-T1 by Mathieu Gasquet appeared first on Digital Photography School.


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Photokina 2014: Fujifilm interview – ‘Over the past few months I’ve been getting more confident’

25 Sep

DPReview attended the Photokina trade show last week in Cologne Germany, and as well as stand reports and hands-on looks at the major new products we also sat down with executives from several of the major camera manufacturers. In this interview, we speak to Toshihisa Iida, Senior Manager of Sales & Marketing in Fujifilm’s Optical Device & Electronic Imaging products division. Click through to read more

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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‘Every six months I want to do something new’ Kimio Maki of Sony

05 Nov

SonyInterview.jpg

Kimio Maki is something of a legend within Sony, and is considered the ‘father’ of several important products. These include the RX-series of digital cameras –  the groundbreaking RX100 / II and RX1 / R – and also the new Alpha A7 and A7R, which bring full-frame imaging to the mirrorless interchangeable lens market. We caught up with him at this year’s Photo Plus Expo in New York. Click through to read our interview.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Alligator steals DSLR, kindly returns it eight months later

25 Aug

photo-2-1024x755.jpg

During a holiday party at the Everglades Alligator Farm last year, employee and budding wildlife photographer Mario Aldecoa was setting up his camera to capture the glowing eyes of the local residents. It wasn’t long after he mounted his Canon DSLR to a tripod when, in a flash, one of the gators grabbed the whole thing as if it was lunch. After a fruitless search the next morning, Aldecoa had all but given up on finding his camera. Eight months later, he was in for a surprise.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Editorial: 5 Reasons why I haven’t used my DSLR for months

31 Jul

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Compact cameras, smartphones and mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras are getting seriously good these days, and for a lot of photographers, they’re supplementing or even replacing older, bulkier DSLR kit. After he finished our recently-published review of the Fujifilm X100S, dpreview editor Barnaby Britton realized that he hadn’t picked up his DSLR for months. In this short feature, he explains why.

News: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Joy to the World, Flickr Offers 3 Months of Pro for FREE!

22 Dec

Joy to the World, Flickr Offers 3 Months of Pro for FREE!

I saw an unusual notification on my Flickrstream this morning — you probably did too. It seems that Flickr just offered to extend to every account on Flickr (and new accounts too) three months of free Pro service. Ho Ho Ho! Merry Christmas! Happy Hanukkah!

Thank you Flickr!

This is an absolutely brilliant move on Flickr’s part, for many reasons.

First, the timing of this offer could not be better. After last week’s Instagram fiasco, Flickr signed up a lot of new accounts. Now these new accounts get to have the cleanest advertising free Flickr experience possible during those formative first three months.

Folks will like the paid service more than the free version and after three months they’ll be more invested in the site than after two days, and potentially will be more likely to keep paying. Flickr is also signing up more new accounts due to their fantastic new mobile app.

Second, Flickr limits Pro accounts to 200 visible photos. More active users will post more than 200 photos there in the next three months. After their Pro term is up, they will want to see their photos that will then disappear (or the critic might say “held hostage”), the only way to do that will be to reup and pay for more Pro service.

If people are not paying attention to the 200 photo limit, they will be more likely to reup when they have 300 photos uploaded than if they have 200 uploaded and all of a sudden notice that photo number 201 is not showing up. Most people will just quickly accept the offer rather than carefully consider the differences between free and Pro accounts and Flickr will end up with more Pro accounts three months from now than they would have had without the offer. Some will stick.

Third, the Holidays are an especially important time to be out there recruiting new accounts. People share a lot of family photos during the Holidays and Flickr is striking while the iron is hot here at just the right time. BTW, those important family Christmas photos will be some of the first to disappear for new Flickr accounts three months from now. ;)

Fourth, activity begets activity. You will be more likely to use a Pro Flickr account than a free Flickr account. Already Flickr is seeing a big influx of new relationships because of their new find friend features with Twitter and Facebook.

If you haven’t logged into your Flickr account in a while, log in now and look at your recent activity. What you’ll notice is a lot more people have been adding you as a contact. You’ll also notice that a lot of the familiar names are people that are connected to you on Twitter and Facebook. That’s because your friends are using the new Flickr iOS mobile feature that allows you to add your Facebook and Twitter friends to Flickr. More people will be hoping on Flickr to claim their free Pro upgrade and notice all the new activity and be more likely to engage.

BTW PRO TIP: If you are an Android user, you don’t need the iOS app to add your Facebook friends. You can do that on the web here.

Now, the free gift doesn’t come without just a tiny bit of controversy though. Although Flickr in NO WAY changed their Terms of Use or their Community Guidelines (this is important and smart after the Instagram debacle), they DID, for the first time that I’m aware of, put users on warning that unlimited at Flickr really does not in fact truly mean unlimited. All of us seasoned and cynical internet geeks knew this anyways, but I’ve never seen Flickr say it before. Tacked on to today’s free gift is the following bit:

“Note: To avoid abuse of our unlimited storage, we do monitor accounts for excessive usage. Yahoo! limits the number and size of photos allowed from an account within a given timeframe. While our goal is to ensure that everyone benefits from unlimited storage, Flickr is not intended to be used as a content distribution network.”

Aha! Say what? Wait, a minute, what’s this all about?

Users have already raised this issue with Flickr in their help forum and so far there is no definitive answer as to what exactly constitutes this sort of abuse. I doubt you’ll see one either.

Flickr’s deal with us in the past has always been that Pro accounts get an unlimited number of photos to upload. For someone like me who is planning on publishing one million photos to the web during my lifetime, this has always been a huge benefit in using Flickr over other services. To publish the same amount of photos I’ve already published to Flickr at Google’s Picasa, it would cost me hundreds of dollars a year. I am clearly taking advantage of the whole unlimited storage thing at Flickr with over 77,000 high res photos up there currently. At $ 24.95/year for me, this is a HUGE bargain.

It’s fine that I’m doing this by the way, and all in, even though it probably costs Flickr more to store my photos than I pay in subscription fees, my photos make up for it in other ways (by driving more users to Flickr as a community member, through my participation in the program with Getty, etc.). I’m probably still actually a profitable account to Flickr all things considered.

Personally speaking, I feel 99.9% confident that even uploading a million photos to Flickr during my lifetime I will not run afoul of this new notice. That’s because I’m doing the sort of thing on the site that is good for Flickr. I’m a good community member. Although I’m very prolific and using Flickr in an extreme way, I’m basically using it for what it is meant for, to share my photos with my friends and the world.

If I was truly doing something abusive (like uploading a million private high res copies of the exact same black square 24 hours a day and just chewing up bandwidth and storage for no apparent reason) I’d probably be shut down.

So for the 99.9% of you out there who read that notice and worry a little bit, don’t. You are not who Flickr is concerned with here. Besides, you can always say, why is Thomas Hawk allowed to upload so many photos if I can’t. ;) Unlimited really does mean practically unlimited for almost every conceivable authentic use case for Flickr.

By the way, even without this sort of “excessive use” disclaimer from Flickr today, Flickr always could have deleted your account for excessive use in the past anyways. Flickr’s Community Guidelines are wide enough to drive a Mack truck through. You can have your account deleted on Flickr simply for being “that guy.” So Flickr always has had the right to delete your account for essentially any reason that they feel like.

Anyways, thanks to Flickr for three extra months of Pro — a good marketing effort at just the right time. Flickr has really been firing on all cylinders lately and this is great to see. Now just give me that new Android app for New Year’s Day and justified photos in sets and search as a token of love on Valentine’s Day. Oh and better blocking tools and the ability to mute threads would be cool for Lincoln and Washington’s birthday! ;)


Thomas Hawk Digital Connection

 
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