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Posts Tagged ‘Bring’

Atomos is working on a Ninja V update to bring 12-bit 4K/30p ProRes RAW to Nikon Z6 II, Z7 II cameras

17 Oct

The cameras haven’t even his the shelves of retailers yet and already Atomos has announced its Ninja V monitor/recorder will support ProRes RAW recording over HDMI on Nikon’s forthcoming Z6 II and Z7 II camera systems.

While both the Z6 II and Z7 II have respectable internal recording capabilities in their own right — 4K/60p for the Z7 II out of the box and with the Z6 II via a future firmware update — the addition of ProRes RAW recording further adds to the creative capabilities of Nikon’s latest mirrorless cameras.

Atomos says both the Z6 II and Z7 II will be able to output up to 4K/30p 12-bit ProRes RAW video over HDMI to the Atomos Ninja V recorder when it receives an AtomOS firmware update later this year. Atomos also notes that Nikon’s N-Log profile is fully supported in its AtomHDR monitoring pipeline ‘with the ability to add built in 709 preview, custom 3D LUTs and LOG to HDR conversion for both monitoring and output.’

You can keep up to date with the latest AtomOS firmware updates on Atomos’ support page.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Atomos, Olympus working to bring ProRes RAW to E-M1X, E-M1 Mark III by end of year

15 Sep

Atomos and Olympus have teamed up to announce the duo is co-developing firmware updates that will enable ProRes RAW footage to be captured on the OM-D E-M1X and OM-D E-M1 Mark III mirrorless cameras when paired with the Atomos Ninja V over HDMI.

This partnership is the latest in many that have seen numerous cameras gain ProRes RAW output over HDMI when recording to an Atomos Ninja V recorder, including the Sigma fp, Fujifilm GFX100 and many others. The announcement doesn’t lay out the video specifications that will be able to be captured, nor a date we can expect the firmware updates to go live, but the press release says we can expect them before the end of 2020.

We’ll be sure to share an update article when the firmware updates go live later this year.

Press release:

Atomos announces ProRes RAW support for Olympus OM-D E-M1X and OM-D E-M1 Mark III mirrorless cameras

September 15, Melbourne, Australia: Atomos is excited to announce co-development with Olympus of RAW recording over HDMI with the OM-D E-M1X and Olympus OM-D E-M1 Mark III mirrorless cameras. Together these powerful Olympus cameras and the Atomos Ninja V will record Apple ProRes RAW directly from the camera’s sensor.

Olympus users who love the OM-D family for its portability and in-body 5-axis image stabilization will get all the benefits of a ProRes RAW workflow – creative control to adjust the color and look of the video in post-production while extending brightness and shadow detail.

The Ninja V allows users to accurately monitor the RAW signal on its daylight-viewable 5” 1000nit brightness HDR screen. Setup is simple with perfectly tuned color settings applied automatically. Users can then view the image in HDR quality with a choice of HLG and PQ (HDR10) formats. The Ninja V offers touchscreen access to tools like waveforms, 1-1 magnification and focus peaking, allowing users to perfect their shot setup. The Ninja V then records the ProRes RAW data onto a removable AtomX SSDmini or other SSD drive. When shooting is complete the drive is removed and connected to a computer via USB for immediate offload and editing.

Jeromy Young, Atomos CEO, said: “We’re thrilled to work with Olympus and their stunning mirrorless cameras to bring the power of Apple’s ProRes RAW to OM-D users. We can’t wait to see the creativity that results from this partnership”.

ProRes RAW the new standard:

ProRes RAW is now firmly established as the new standard for RAW video capture, with Olympus being the eighth brand to support the format with the OM-D E-M1X and OM-D E-M1 Mark III mirrorless cameras. ProRes RAW combines the visual and workflow benefits of RAW video with the incredible real-time performance of ProRes. The format gives filmmakers enormous latitude when adjusting the look of their images and extending brightness and shadow detail, making it ideal for HDR workflows. Both ProRes RAW, and the higher bandwidth, less compressed ProRes RAW HQ are supported. Manageable file sizes speed up and simplify file transfer, media management, and archiving. ProRes RAW is fully supported in Final Cut Pro X and Adobe Premiere Pro along with a collection of other apps including ASSIMILATE SCRATCH, Colorfront, FilmLight Baselight and Grass Valley Edius.

The firmware update to enable these features is scheduled for winter 2020.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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SEO For Photographers – How to Bring More Business to Your Site

10 Aug

The post SEO For Photographers – How to Bring More Business to Your Site appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Darina Kopcok.

In today’s digital world, there is so much to learn on the technology side. As a photographer, Search Engine Optimization may be far down on your list of what you give your time to.

However, good SEO is vital to your success, as it can help your website rank higher in searches on major search engines such as Google.

It may come as no surprise that studies show up to 80% of click traffic goes to the top three search results. People are more likely to refine a search than go on to the second page if they don’t immediately find what they’re looking for.

Strong SEO translates into ranking high in organic searches, which means more potential clients for your photography business.

Here are some best practices of SEO for photographers to get you started.

Image: A screenshot of a Google Analytics Dashboard. Analytics is great for monitoring visitor traff...

A screenshot of a Google Analytics Dashboard. Analytics is great for monitoring visitor traffic and how different pages on your site are performing.

How search engines work

Search engines contain a huge database of all the content that they have discovered on the Internet called an “Index”. An estimated 35 trillion web pages across the Internet worldwide are indexed by Google alone. Google is the preferred search engine for about 90% of users.

Search engines scour the Internet for content, looking over the code and content for each URL found. It then stores and organizes the content found during this crawling process.

Once a page is in the index, it is available for display as a result. Finally, it “ranks” the pieces of content that will best answer a searcher’s query, and orders them from most relevant to least relevant. Different search engines use different algorithms, such as showing results in a different order. 

Search engines also pay attention to a lot of other “signals,” such as how often a domain is updated. There are more than 200 signals that can influence where your webpage shows up in any given search. No particular signal is likely to significantly affect your SEO on its own. There are “on-page” factors to SEO like URL structure, and “off-page” factors, such as social media presence.

While you can improve on-page factors right away, off-page factors are less tangible and take time to build. This is why marketing needs to be a big part of your overall SEO strategy.

SEO For Photographers - How to Bring More Business to Your Site

How to improve your photography site’s SEO

Make sure your website is mobile-optimized

The first thing you need to do to improve your SEO is to make sure that your site is mobile-friendly. Not only are a far greater number of searches now taking place on mobile devices, but Google also gives preferential results toward websites optimized for mobile viewing. This means that your site must be responsive – that your webpage design is based on the device used to view the content.

Your site may rank number one for a search term from a desktop computer, but it won’t necessarily be number one in the same search on a phone or iPad.

SEO For Photographers - How to Bring More Business to Your Site

Use relevant Keywords

Like hashtags used in social media, keywords are an important way to boost your SEO and ensure that your website comes up in search results. However, also like hashtags, you can’t use them willy-nilly and expect great results. Keywords must be relevant to your audience and your content. In other words, they must be researched and chosen with care. 

In order to do this, you have to have an understanding of who your clients are and what they’re looking for. For example, if you’re a wedding photographer, is your potential client looking for a destination wedding? Where are they located? Are they looking for someone locally or internationally?

Ask yourself what terms and questions your potential client might be entering in their preferred search engine. How is your audience searching for the service you provide?

To help you, try using a keyword research tool like Moz or Wordstream. These applications can help you discover and export keywords and performance data for improved searches.

Image: Have an understanding of what your potential client may search for when trying to find a phot...

Have an understanding of what your potential client may search for when trying to find a photographer.

Update your content frequently

It’s very common for photographers to spend a lot of time developing their initial portfolio for their site and then neglect to update it. I’ve seen photography websites where even the copyright notation hasn’t been updated since 2015.

As a photographer, you want to appear working and busy. You may in fact be incredibly busy, but if you’re not updating your content you won’t seem to be. From an SEO perspective, you should know that Google will often factor in new content when ranking search results.

This is one more reason to make sure to regularly add content to your website to make sure you stay relevant in search results. 

Use Social Media

Love it or hate it, social media is incredibly relevant to photographers, or anyone with an online presence. As mentioned earlier, social media is one of those on-page factors that act as a signal to drive SEO. Search engines look at social media platforms like Facebook and Instagram as a sign of what is influential on the Internet.

Social media is an important marketing tool and engaging in is will positively affect how you rank in search engine results.

Photography is a service-driven business. Relationships are the foundation. Customers are more likely to buy from you if they feel a rapport with you and feel like they can trust you. Social media is very helpful in putting your face to your business.

Image: A social media presence is important to ranking well in search engines like Google.

A social media presence is important to ranking well in search engines like Google.

Write a blog

Most photographers I know are very visual people and don’t consider themselves good at writing. However, you don’t need to be the next Ernest Hemingway to write a photography blog. In fact, using simple language and short posts of around 300 words or so (though longer can be better too) can really help you in your SEO-boosting efforts.

You can post a series of images on your blog from a portrait shoot, or post some behind-the-scenes snaps of a commercial product shoot you executed with a team of people.

A bit of a description or your thoughts on the shoot or the process will suffice. Give readers an idea of what it will be like to work with you.

This is great from a marketing perspective, but having a blog linked to your photography website allows you to build good textual content and backlinks. On the other hand, having links to only your homepage will have limited effect.

In particular, having a WordPress site attached to your portfolio site can be incredible in helping you rank higher in search results. 

Just be aware that when you do blog, be sure you post high-quality content. Search engines can penalize your domain for duplicate content or broken external links too.

Get others to link to you

Having other sites or blogs to link to you is a great way to boost your SEO. When your work is featured on a popular site, it creates a cascade of links from other sites. Links from other websites to yours are called backlinks and they’re important for good SEO. 

Apply to have your work featured on relevant industry websites or published in magazines. Also, consider writing guest posts on other blogs where you’re not a direct competitor of the blog owner. 

Getting featured in popular feeds on Instagram can lead to new followers on your own feed and potential, interested visitors to your site.

Create a free Google Business Listing

Creating a free Google Business listing will help increase your chances to be found in search results. It allows your company information to be output with high visibility in a variety of ways by Google.

A large percentage of searches are geography-specific, like “Vancouver food photographer.”

When Google returns results that have a geographic component, Google Maps pack prioritizes them over standard results. This is a set of results plotted on a clickable map as per the example below.

Image: When Google returns results that have a geographic component, Google Maps pack prioritizes th...

When Google returns results that have a geographic component, Google Maps pack prioritizes them over standard results and they are plotted on a clickable map.

When you set up your business listing, you’ll also have access to Google My Business Insights. This provides you with detailed information on how and where consumers are searching for your business. Along with your website’s Google Analytics data, it creates an overview of how people find your website and business listing and the actions they take. 

Note that to create a Google Business Listing, you need to be comfortable providing a physical address to your business, which may be your home address, if you don’t have a studio.

To sum up

As you may have gathered, success with SEO for photographers is a long-game. There are a variety of factors that are important in building good SEO for photographers, and they require consistency and analysis.

Be sure to sign up with Google Analytics to track your results. Information is power, and knowing how visitors are using your site will help you tweak your approach and get noticed in search results.

Do you have any other tips you’d like to share with us? Please do so in the comments section below.

 

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The post SEO For Photographers – How to Bring More Business to Your Site appeared first on Digital Photography School. It was authored by Darina Kopcok.


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Fujifilm plans to bring back NEOPAN 100 Acros black and white film by the end of the year

10 Jun

Fujifilm has announced it will re-start black and white film manufacturing this year and will bring out a new version of its former Acros film. The new NEOPAN Acros 100 II will feature finer grain and the company claims it will be the sharpest black and white film on the market.

In a press release on the Fujifilm Japan website, President Kenji Sono explains that after the company stopped production of monochrome film last year many of its users asked for production to be started again. Part of the issue for the company, he says, was that some raw materials in the film were hard to source. For the new film alternatives have been found and the production process radically changed to account for them.

Using ‘Super Fine particle technology’ the company has achieved an extremely fine-grained emulsion that produces what are described as 3-dimensional results. Highlight details are also much improved over the way they were rendered in the previous film.

NEOPAN Acros 100 ll is due to go on sale towards the end of the year and will be available in 135 and 120 formats.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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NASCAR teams up with DroneShield to bring down unwanted drones at racing events

18 Mar

It’s not just countries and federal agencies getting tough on drones, unruly or otherwise. According to a report from TechCrunch, NASCAR, the sanctioning body of multiple stock-car racing series in the United States and abroad, has struck a deal with anti-drone technology company DroneShield to help shoot down rogue drones at specific venues.

According to the report, DroneShield will be present at NASCAR-sanctioned events held at Texas Motor Speedway in Fort Worth, Texas. This includes events for the Monster Energy NASCAR Cup Series and other feeder stock-car series throughout the 2019 season. Below is a promotional video captured and shared by DroneShield showing off its new DroneGun product:

In an email announcing the news, DroneShield CEO said ‘We are proud to be able to assist a high-profile event like this […] We also believe that this is significant for DroneShield in that this is the first known live operational use of all three of our key products – DroneSentinel, DroneSentry and DroneGun – by U.S. law enforcement.’

DroneShield Sentry (left), DroneShield Sentinel (right).

Despite being the first time its trifecta of products are being used, this isn’t the first time DroneShield has been used at major sporting events. DroneShield technology was used at the 2018 Winter Olympics in PyeongChang, South Korea, as well as at the Commonwealth Games in Brisbane, Australia most recently.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

10 Nov

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Three Men © Moises Levy

Framing and composition are two of the most basic tools in every photographers arsenal, but they can also be some of the most powerful.

In his recent of photographs, Mexico City photographer Moises Levy shows how simple black and white photographs on the beach can be turned into wonderfully juxtaposed images with the help of perfect timing, great composition, and clever framing.

In speaking with DPReview about the ongoing series, Levy said “Human condition is the main subject of my photography. I use several resources to express my ideas in photography like perspective and scale. My images are intimate too — I believe being close to my subject helps me to create powerful images.”

Levy says he works with only one camera and one lens at a time — either his Leica or Fujifilm with a 28mm r 35mm lens.

“I prefer to create anonymous subjects and for that I like to work with backlight to create high contrast black and white images in a more graphic sense,” Levy tells DPReview. “I also like to shoot very minimal and clean images and for that I use very low angles in places with almost no distractions, like beaches and open spaces.”

You can keep up with Levy’s work by checking out his website or following him on Instagram, Flickr, and Facebook.


Photographs by Moises Levy, used with permission.

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

5 Guys © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Action 5 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Action 8 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Action 11 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Arch © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Ave en tres palos © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Beer Man © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Chapuzon © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Communication © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Fisherman Net © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Fly © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Ghost © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Giraffes 1 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Horses 2 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Horses 1 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Jump 1 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Jump 2 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Kid © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Kiss © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Looking For Turtles © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

My Dog And I © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

On Place 1 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Perro Garza Y Hombre © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Play © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Resting © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Running 1 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Shadow And Fisherman © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Soul © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Trapped 2 © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Volley © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Ball Head © Moises Levy

Friday Feature: Framing, timing bring juxtaposed beach scenes to life

Game 1 © Moises Levy

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Capture One Latitude style packs bring warm and cold color presets

10 Jul

Phase One has launched its new Latitude style series, the latest addition to the company’s Capture One Style Packs product launched last year. The Latitude presets are offered in two different packs: Latitude | Deep Forest and Latitude | Sunbound. The new series was inspired by “some of the world’s greatest destinations,” Phase One said in its announcement.

Both Latitude style packs contain eight presets, each with original, bright, and dark variations, for a total of 24 styles per pack. The “Sunbound” pack focuses on adding warmth to images, and the “Deep Forest” pack focuses on cold colors.

“The Styles are built to enhance curves, saturation and tonal adjustments,” says Phase One Software VP Jan Hyldebrandt-Larsen,”without affecting key capture parameters such as exposure and white balance.”

Each Latitude pack is priced at $ 39 USD, but a limited-time discount offers both together for $ 59 USD until July 27. Buyers must run Capture One version 10.1.2 or newer to install the style packs. The latest version of the software, Capture One 11, is offered through Phase One’s online store for $ 180 USD (single-user license).

Via: Phase One

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Adobe Creative Cloud updates bring preset and profile syncing to Lightroom CC

19 Jun
A new batch paste option in Lightroom CC allows settings to be quickly synced across multiple images.

Adobe has announced a raft of updates across its suite of Creative Cloud apps, including Lightroom CC and Lightroom Classic CC.

For photographers, Lightroom CC receives the most substantial updates, which include easy synchronization of presets and profiles across all devices. Preset and profile syncing works with Lightroom’s inbuilt options, as well as custom and third-party presets and profiles. Presets can now be created in Lightroom CC on mobile devices, too. iOS devices also gain a new chromatic aberration removal tool, and a beta ‘long-exposure’ mode which combines multiple images and stacks them to simulate the effect of a long shutter speed without the need for a tripod.

Lightroom CC for iOS now includes a ‘Technology Preview’ of a new long exposure photo mode, which simulates the effect of using a long shutter speed by combining several conventionally-captured exposures into one.

For those using Lightroom CC on a desktop computer, Adobe has improved batch syncing of settings across multiple images, and enhanced the options for sharing albums.

Users of Lightroom Classic CC are promised a substantial update ‘coming soon’ but in the meantime, Adobe has provided an iterative release centering on ‘speed, stability, and a focus on professional workflows’. To that end, Adobe has added new ways of accessing and sorting presets, new color labels for organizing folders, and faster searching inside them.

Learn more about what’s new in Adobe Lightroom CC

Learn more about what’s new in Adobe Lightroom Classic CC

In other news, for designers, Adobe Spark is now available for Android smart devices and Adobe XD benefits from a range of improvements and added features including overlay support and private sharing.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Qualcomm’s 700-series chipset will bring triple-cameras to mid-range smartphones

13 May

With the Huawei P20 Pro there is still only one triple-camera smartphone currently available on the market. We have already heard that Apple might be launching a third generation iPhone X with triple-camera in 2019, but now it seems the technology could trickle down to mid-range devices even before that.

Specifications for Qualcomm’s upcoming 700 series mobile chipset have leaked on Suggestphone.com, and the documents indicate the new chipset will support triple-cameras as well as AI processing accelerators. The latter should come in handy for all sorts of AI-powered imaging tasks, such as scene and object identification. The former… well that one’s obvious.

The Snapdragon 700 series should slot in nicely between the current SD600 series (which powers mid-range smartphones up to around the $ 500 price point) and the Snapdragon 800 line (which is reserved for high-end models).

Image: Suggestphone.com

The Snapdragon 710 was allegedly designed using a Samsung 10nm LPE process for low power consumption and higher performance than previous 14nm chipsets. The Snapdragon 730, meanwhile, builds on the newer Samsung 8nm LPP process, resulting in a 10% smaller surface area and 10% lower power consumption than the 10LPP process. It’ll also provide more oomph than the SD710.

The first smartphones with the SD710 chipset are expected to hit the shelves in early 2019; we’ll have to wait a little longer until later in 2019 for the SD730. Hopefully we’ll see a few SD8xx-powered triple-cameras before then, but it’s reassuring to know more affordable triple-camera will be available in the foreseeable future.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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Instagram might bring back the chronological feed

13 Mar

In 2016, Instagram changed the way the images of the users you are following are displayed in the app from a chronological feed, to a much-debated ‘”algorithm feed”, causing a fairly heavy backlash among its user base.

The chronological feed wasn’t even kept alive as an option, meaning that since this change users have had to rely on the intelligence of Instagram’s algorithm instead of simply seeing posts appear in real-time. Then, adding insult to injury, Instagram recently started inserting “recommended” posts of users you’re not even following into your (still algorithmic) feed.

Almost two years after the change, users are still complaining about the algorithm feed, but there are now signs Instagram might bring the chronological feed back as an option.

Resource Magazine reports that Instagram user @jackharding posted a video of his Instagram stories, showing his feed was in chronological order and including the following comment:

“Instagram back to chronological order. I wonder if this is good or bad news.”

This could simply have been coincidence, but In a follow-up story the same user revealed he is an Instagram employee, and part of a beta test of the new chronological feed. And while my own Instagram feed is still in algorithm mode, more reports about users seeing a chronological feed have since appeared on the web.

So, if you’re one of the many (many, many) users who have been missing Instagram’s chronological feed over the past two years, it seems there is now hope. For already-popular accounts with massive engaged followings, a move back to chronological could actually hurt their reach; however, for anyone looking to build a following on Instagram, it would level the playing field and put everyone on equal footing once again.

No word on when or even if Instagram will ultimately make this change—a beta test does not a promise make—but let us know in the comments if your Instagram feed has shifted back to chronological order, and what you think of the change.

Articles: Digital Photography Review (dpreview.com)

 
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