New designs for replacement ME200S-SH and ME20F-SH cameras seem to have surfaced
- Cinema EOS Rumors
- 3 Replies
Some more great Canon innovation. These sort of things can reach consumer products in modified forms.
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Hopefully it will be in the 2020 releases.Looks like you can actually get it now![]()
I'd like a very light 300mm f/4 to replace the antique one. It won't be any heavier to have it FF. The Nikon PF one is really good.They should make new tele lens ,worthy for new 32mpix sensor.
EF-S 150mm f4L sharpest canon lens never made and weight like 200g
around 135mm lenses seems to be sharpest on sony and zeiss.
Let's hope they survive.Unfortunately, the BBC's level of journalism/headline writing is nothing to what it used to be. It sounds like Jessops's is going into a CVA (Creditors Voluntary Arrangement) , almost certainly as a way to cram down landlord liabilities - or at least future rents - while the shareholder(s) still retains ownership.
The BBC is using lazy reporting and calling it an "administration", though that is technically a different insolvency process. (While it is true that a corporate can first enter administration, and then "exit" via a CVA, these days there is sufficient legal protection while pulling together a CVA to not need bother with the extra expense of a preliminary Administration). Once upon a time the BBC employed financial journalists who knew about business and legal processes - now... not so much.. and the 'gist of the facts' is good enough
Like so many high street retailers, it finds itself with a large number of rented shops, and now unable to meet the previously agreed lease rentals - if you want to be cynical, they simply now want to change the agreements they previously entered into, if you're more forgiving, then they are suffering due to a change in retailing (i.e. internet operations) and need to re-adjust one of their biggest costs through no fault of their own...
Since it is not the first time Peter Jones has used a CVA to reduce the landlord costs on one of his "investments", I'm more inclined to go with the first view.
Anyway - if it helps save the jobs of those still employed by Jessops, then I hope it is successful: they have had some really enthusiastic sales men down the years, who have helped a lot of people into photography.
I can't argue for most of those lenses, so I'll have to leave it at "time will tell".
Both Canon EF 75-300mm are cheaper than the EF-S 55-250mm IS non-STM (at least at the moment @ B&H). This seems to me like dump prices (= Canon trying to get rid of existing stock), rather than the lenses being manufactured & sold at a profit. Canon not having IBIS, and the low end market shrinking, I don't see IS-less teles selling that well.
Thanks for this good summary....
There's pretty much a consensus that...
Sounds like you are getting happier and happier with the horrible camera known as the EOS R.Speaking of Exposure, I'm finding that with the EVF, I'm using Exposure Compensation quite a bit less than with dSLR's. I'm staying mostly with Spot Metering, then, when it makes sense, moving the frame around a bit between subject and background (or, for example, clothing), which allows me to clearly see and choose the exact right exposure for me. At that point, I simply press AE Lock with Hold to lock it in and compose.
Sometimes the EC dial is quicker, getting my exposure where I want it without having to move the Spot Metering circle around, but sometimes this other technique, which would have been experienced guess work with an OVF, just nails it.