• UPDATE



    The forum will be moving to a new domain in the near future (canonrumorsforum.com). I have turned off "read-only", but I will only leave the two forum nodes you see active for the time being.

    I don't know at this time how quickly the change will happen, but that will move at a good pace I am sure.

    ------------------------------------------------------------

RF 15-35 f/2.8 L IS USM

I don't recall reading any rumors about an update for the RF 15-35 f/2.8. None, nowhere. Has anybody heard of anything about it?

The reason I ask? There is a 600$ rebate on this lens, and before letting myself be tempted by it, I'd like to know if I risk regretting this substantial purchase in the near future…

I own the old EF version of this lens, and I'm not sure if I'm still happy with it.

Powershot V1 shows Impressive Dynamic Range Results

Photonstophotos dropped a new camera into its analysis, and to be honest, the results surprised me a bit. Now, if you weren't aware, the V1 has a slightly larger than Micro Four Thirds sensor. I expected the PowerShot V1 to fare worse than Canon's own APS-C sensors because of the higher pixel density and the […]

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45mm 1:1.2 just arrived

Difficult beast.

Tried a few test shots around close focus limit wide open.

Center focus only, no eye focus etc… Everything still manageable.

Eye focus enabled, pure chaos.

Once the AF misses it is a long and slow journey back to anything not blurry. Using the old 85mm 1:1.2 Mark1 is much faster and that lens was never a sprinter.



Otherwise, nice lens, feels somehow lighter that the RF 50mm 1:1.8 (which it is not)

Tiny front element compared to the backside.

I include 2 pictures for comparison

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Sigma USB DOCK for Canon EF Discontinued

(For some reason it says I'm not logged on to post a comment under the Article but I did the requested Forum password reset and can post here...)

One thing to note about the Dock is it can be useful if you get a Sigma EF Lens to adapt to RF.

This can be a good idea as some are very reasonably priced, for example I see the EF 50mm f/1.4 Art can be had for £409 used in excellent condition (which is a larger but interesting alternative to the slightly more expensive 45/1.2 and its "classic" rendering):

However I have found (with my bought-new back-in-the-day) 50 Art that the RF IBIS doesn't work (at least on my R5ii) if the lens is set to Full Time Manual Focusing in its options, which you need a Dock to change. I should point out that when I found IBIS wasn't working I asked Sigma, and a little later they told me the answer, any connection between the two was not even vaguely obvious.

I bought my EF Dock used as it's a simple does-it-work question rather than a lens where you might want to check it a bit more... Though I notice MPB say it's out of Stock so used availability might be an issue, as people buy them if they have a suitable lens and presumably would either keep them or sell them with their last Sigma EF lens...

Katharine Burr Blodgett: Inventor of non-reflective coatings for glass?

She invented the technology that makes your glasses, cameras, and phone screens work. Her name was deliberately left out of history—until now.
In 1917, Katharine Burr Blodgett walked into the General Electric research laboratory in Schenectady, New York, and became the first woman ever hired there.
She was 18 years old.
The men in the lab didn't know what to make of her. Women weren't supposed to be in physics. They certainly weren't supposed to be brilliant at it.
Katharine was both.
But to understand how an 18-year-old woman ended up in one of America's most prestigious research labs, you need to understand what came before.
Katharine was born in 1898, just weeks after her father was murdered. George Blodgett, a patent attorney, was shot and killed in a home invasion robbery in Schenectady before his daughter was born.
Her mother, Katherine Burr Blodgett, refused to let tragedy define their lives. She was determined that her daughter would have every educational opportunity—even in a world that told women their only career was marriage.
Young Katharine was brilliant. Frighteningly brilliant. She excelled in math and science when girls were told those subjects would damage their delicate brains.
At 15, she graduated from high school. At 17, she finished Bryn Mawr College—one of the few colleges that would even admit women. She graduated with a degree in physics when most physics departments wouldn't allow women through the door.
Then she did something audacious. She applied for a job at General Electric's research laboratory.
The lab director was Irving Langmuir, who would later win the Nobel Prize for his work on surface chemistry. When he met Katharine, he saw something the rest of the world was trained to miss: genius has no gender.
He hired her on the spot.
She was the first woman ever employed in GE's research lab. The first woman to work alongside the men who were inventing the modern world.
But Langmuir knew she needed more than a job. She needed credentials that would make it impossible for the scientific community to dismiss her.
He told her to go to Cambridge University in England and get a Ph.D. in physics.
In 1926, Katharine Burr Blodgett became the first woman ever to earn a doctorate in physics from Cambridge University.
She was 28 years old. And she was just getting started.
She returned to GE and began working on a problem that had frustrated scientists for decades: reflection.
Every surface that interacts with light—glass, lenses, mirrors—reflects some of that light back. This creates glare. Distortion. Lost clarity.
For telescopes, it meant dimmer images. For cameras, it meant hazy photographs. For eyeglasses, it meant distracting reflections. For cinema projectors, it meant less vibrant films.
Katharine wondered: what if you could eliminate reflection entirely?
Working with Langmuir, she developed a revolutionary technique. She discovered that by depositing ultra-thin molecular layers onto glass—layers so thin they were only a few molecules thick—she could manipulate how light behaved on the surface.
If you layered these films precisely, the reflected light waves would cancel each other out through destructive interference.
The result? Glass that didn't reflect. Glass that appeared almost invisible.
She called it "non-reflective coating."
The world had never seen anything like it.
In 1938, when she perfected the technique, she held up a piece of coated glass and photographers couldn't capture it on film—it was so non-reflective that cameras couldn't see it properly. The images showed what looked like empty space where the glass should be.
She'd made glass invisible.
The applications were immediate and revolutionary. Eyeglasses with her coating eliminated glare, making vision clearer. Microscope lenses could magnify with unprecedented clarity. Telescope lenses could capture fainter stars. Camera lenses produced sharper photographs.
Cinema projection improved dramatically—audiences watching movies in the 1940s and 50s were seeing Katharine's invention, though almost none of them knew her name.
During World War II, her work became critical to the military. She developed improved methods for detecting submarines. She created better de-icing techniques for aircraft wings. She improved smoke screens that saved lives.
By the end of her career, she held eight patents. Her techniques became foundational to modern materials science. The Langmuir-Blodgett film deposition method—named partially for her—is still used today in nanotechnology and advanced materials research.
Your smartphone screen uses her technology. Your anti-glare glasses use her invention. Every precision optical instrument from microscopes to space telescopes builds on her work.
She revolutionized optics. And history almost forgot her name.
Because she was a woman in science, her achievements were consistently attributed to her male colleagues. Langmuir received the Nobel Prize—deservedly, for his own work—but Katharine's contributions were minimized or ignored.
When she was recognized, it was often with surprise. As if brilliance in a woman was an anomaly rather than evidence that women had always been brilliant—just systematically denied the opportunity to prove it.
Katharine never demanded the spotlight. She wasn't interested in fame. She was interested in clarity—in glass, in science, in understanding how the world worked at its most fundamental level.
She worked at GE for 44 years until her retirement in 1963. She never married, dedicating her life to research.
She died in 1979 at age 81. Her obituaries were brief. The world moved on quickly, forgetting the woman who'd made the world clearer.
But every time you put on glasses without glare, you're using her invention.
Every time you take a photograph with a clear lens, that's her legacy.
Every time you watch a movie projected crisply on a screen, you're seeing her work.
Every woman who walks into a physics lab and is told "you don't belong here" is walking through a door Katharine Burr Blodgett already opened.
She was 18 years old when she became the first woman hired at General Electric's research laboratory in a building full of men who didn't think women could do physics.
She invented technology that changed how humanity sees the world.
And for decades, history couldn't see her.
But now we do.
Now we remember that every barrier broken makes the next one easier to break.
That every woman told "you don't belong" who succeeds anyway creates possibility for the next generation.
Katharine Burr Blodgett made glass invisible.
History tried to make her invisible too.
We're bringing her back into focus.
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DJI Neo 2: A Smarter, Safer Drone for Beginners

DJI has just introduced the Neo 2, a new model of its compact Neo 2 drone designed for beginners that is targeted at making aerial videography more mainstream. Weighing in at 151g, the Neo 2 is DJI's lightest model equipped with omnidirectional obstacle detection. The Neo 2 is also equipped with video features, improved wind […]

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Here we go Again! Canon Apologizes for R6 Mark III and RF 45mm f/1.2 STM Supply Woes

On November 11, 2025, Canon apologized for the delays in deliveries of several products due to the volume of orders. The notice listed several new items that should come as no surprise to Canon users. Current Canon Products with Supply Challenges EOS R6 Mark III with RF24-105 L IS USM Lens Kit EOS R6 Mark […]

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Canon Sued by Malikie Innovations Over Wi-Fi in Cameras and Printers

Canon Inc. and its subsidiary in the U.S. (Canon USA) are being sued by an Irish company named Malikie Innovations Ltd. They claim that Canon's digital cameras, printers, and mobile app use Wi-Fi technology that infringes six of Malikie's patents. These patents are related to how devices wirelessly connect to either a network or an […]

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CIPA September 2025: Camera Market Continues to Go Up

In a tariff-defying month, CIPA has reported that the sales for September 2025 have actually increased from September 2024. The numbers are slight, with September having 851,641 units shipped while September 2024 had 832874. However, in the tariff times, any increase is welcomed for the Camera Industry. Overall, the camera market in terms of Cameras […]

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Godox Announces the Modular Flash for Multi-System Photographers

Godox has rolled out a multi-functional lighting system designed for photographers utilizing several camera brands. The system consists of the iT32 Mini Flash and the X5 Wireless Flash Trigger, which also works as a hot shoe and wireless transmitter. The system is designed to allow a user to seamlessly switch from one camera system to […]

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Canon R6 Mark 3 and 430EX 2

Hi all. Do I need to buy a new flash to use with the R6? How does it behave on a R6 mark 2. I know I won’t have the AF beam but the camera itself will do that for me. So am I loosing any other features that would affect me in everyday use. I really never dug into settings for the flash. All ever did was maybe down the output of the flash when shooting in manual or AP mode.

If I bought a new flash what would I be gaining in general? Thanks a lot for the useful info!

Jim

Canon Officially Announces the Canon EOS R6 Mark III

Today, Canon has released the Canon EOS R6 Mark III that we have been breathlessly waiting for. The upgrades from its predecessors are quite important if you are either a stills photographer or a videographer. The R6 Mark III features a new 32.5-megapixel full-frame CMOS DPAF AF II sensor, a modest but important increase from […]

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Canon Officially Announces the Canon RF 45mm f/1.2 STM

Canon releases its ultra-fast, yet moderately priced Canon 45mm f1.2 STM today. The RF 45mm F1.2 STM is comprised of 9 elements in 7 groups using a molded aspherical element for sharpness and small size. The lens achieves good bokeh, with nine aperture blades creating smooth, circular background blur, making it good for portraits. However, […]

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Exploring the History of Innovation: The Canon EOS 6 Series

We invite you to join us for an exploration of the Canon EOS 6 Series, a product family that stands out within Canon's full-frame DSLR and mirrorless portfolio. We recommend also looking at our other articles on the Canon Camera Series to provide you with a bigger picture of the Canon camera story. The Canon […]

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What happens after the R63 announcement?

OK, so this is my first go around with a product launch like this. It is somewhat reminiscent of when the iPhone used to create all kinds of hysteria. I am curious, though, what happens after the announcement? I have signed up to be notified when I can pre-order. I am assuming that paying for the camera up front is part of the deal with a pre-order? When can you expect to receive the order? I am also going to assume that the first wave is going to sell out, so how available will this camera be if you don't get in on it in the initial round? Warranties: Is it worth it to get the extended warranties? I am hoping to be able to write this off on my taxes this year as a business deduction, so the timing of this is relevant.

Canon Focus Motor Technology Through the Ages

It's easy to take the technology behind autofocus for granted. Time to take a look into the past and see how far we’ve come in the 40-some-odd years of Canon focus motor technology. Canon Focus Motor Technology in the Distant Past In the early days of autofocus, Canon’s attempts had an autofocus ranging device and […]

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