If you get the chance and get back to the store, set the display performance to "smooth" rather than the default. Also turn on continuous AF. Maybe that will help.
I had it in manual focus. The problem was the EVF, not the AF.
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If you get the chance and get back to the store, set the display performance to "smooth" rather than the default. Also turn on continuous AF. Maybe that will help.
I've really got to ask...are you using dictation?its like people who shoot film who believe the more obstacles they put up the better their picture is if they overcome them, taking pictures and making pictures produce a product that should be judged by its quality not whether the producer was handicapped or from an underprivileged background if you allow the brevity
You don't know the "body and ergos" because the rumor indicates it's based off a forthcoming camera, not the R MK1.
Yes, the speed is fantastic. I think there are a few cards on the market that hit write speeds of 1550MB/S. When I first started using CF they were somewhere around 10MB in size and under 1MB/S transfer speed. We have come a long way!
These folks could always use the term 'Classic' instead.Canon does not have a camera model called the EOS R Mark 1. Product naming conventions across a wide range of industries dictate that nothing is named Mark I (or Marque I). The convention also dictates that Roman numerals follow Mark or Marque. FYI.
Literally everything is just an interpretation, be it your human vision that you see with your bare eye, or through an optical viewfinder, or a JPEG render displayed in an EVF.The EVF should reflect the actual scene, and the raw data should reflect the captured image. The JPEG is just an interpretation of the raw data.
And then they shorten that to Camera Name C, which creates confusion if Canon ever releases another cinema SLRThese folks could always use the term 'Classic' instead.
Believe it or not, 8K movie is not even on my horizon, and none of my Canon bodies (5DSR, 5DIV and 90D) has its bursts limited by current CF or SD cards.
I still suspect there is more juice in the max FPS in AI servo mode
The point of my post is that the write speed from the 5DIV is not limited by the compatible CF cards. It's less than the maximum of the best cards available for it: the fastest write speeds are 112MB/s whereas the cards like the SanDisk Extreme Pro 160MB/s 256GB is rated 160MB/s read speed and 150MB/s write speed.Well, there's no current SD form factor card on the market that is as fast in those three cameras s the fastest CF cards are. For the 5Ds and 5D mark IV, the fastest SD cards max out at around 70 and 80 MB/s, respectively, while the fastest CF cards max out at around 100 and 110 MB/s.
Fastest SD and CF Cards for the Canon 5D Mark IV - A comparison of write speed for 5D Mk IV Digital Camera - Camera Memory Speed Comparison & Performance tests for SD and CF cards
Comparison of SD and CF Cards in Canon EOS 5D Mark IV camera write speed test. The fastest memory card for 5D IV continuous burst shooting.www.cameramemoryspeed.com
No one said you haven’t been Before you get more defensive, I didn’t even claim EVFs were better, though it must be said that EVFs are also not the exclusive purview of amateurs who don’t understand metering.
The EVF should reflect the actual scene, and the raw data should reflect the captured image. The JPEG is just an interpretation of the raw data.
Literally everything is just an interpretation, be it your human vision that you see with your bare eye, or through an optical viewfinder, or a JPEG render displayed in an EVF.
As long as you know how that interpretation comes about, it can help you gain some insight on your subject. I really can't follow you, you seem to talk down to everybody here for having a different preference.
Maybe I misunderstand you, but it seems you would rather have an EVF image that looks unaffected by your exposure settings? So that is more like an OVF? What's the point of that?
So you can choose what "should" happen with your EVF. A few years from now as technology gets better I really see no reason to stay in the limitations of DSLR and OVF.
that would make me a dictator, guess which oneI've really got to ask...are you using dictation?
Ok, who makes one which is not to some degree? My only experience with EVF's outside using them in a brick and mortar store (please don't ever use that experience as a determination for slamming a product outside of ergonomics) was the Oly PenF -awful EVF and the Canon M5- pretty good but needs improvement.Because the EVF doesn't show how the scene looks, it's a power-sucker, and it's laggy.
Nope. My personal rules for the forum, no gun, religion or political chit chat. They are the axis of evil.that would make me a dictator, guess which one
that would make me a dictator, guess which one
Ok, who makes one which is not to some degree?
What you think "should" happen is pretty irrelevant here, an EVF isn't for you it sounds like, great. But if you were wondering, you can turn the Exposure Simulation off the EVF so it "acts" like an OVF. There's three different settings. As Canon Fan Boy also mentioned, you can increase the performance of the EVF as I believe the default setting is power saving and performs similar to how you described.
So you can choose what "should" happen with your EVF. A few years from now as technology gets better I really see no reason to stay in the limitations of DSLR and OVF.