negative. Hate to disappoint you, but as long as I buy and use Canon gear to capture my photos I feel fully entitled to whack them over the head when they deliver sub-par photographic tools.Razor2012 said:In other words...don't go away mad, just go away.![]()
+1 ... exactly!sarangiman said:Post-processing EC instead of ISO change would be fine if Canon sensors had lower read noise & were closer to the theoretical 'ISO-less' camera... but my tests with my 5D Mark III show that even ISO 6400 is better than ISO 1600 + 2stops in post. Haven't seen similar tests with the D800 yet but my guess is that it stands up better to EC in PP than the Canon due to its lower read noise.
So I would say it behooves Canon even more to implement better Auto ISO, since optimizing ISO for a shot is more important on Canon than it is for Nikon, given the higher read noise on Canon sensors.
as a matter of fact, this is exactly what a Nikon D800/D4 lets you do (in A and P modes, points #3 and #4 from my list) ... fully automatically, based on the focal length of the lens attached or the focal length a zoom lens is set to. And if a situation demands somewhat faster shutter times (than 1/focal length) or the action is slow enough to allow somewhat slower shutter times, just dial in "faster or slower" in Auto-ISO sensitivity control. As a matter of fact, Nikon users also had to whack Nikon over the head for years until they finally got a truly functional Auto-ISO model ... ;-)briansquibb said:I would be inclined to fix the shutter speed at the 1/focal length and then shoot all night like that - at least you would avoid motion blur issues.
http://www.dpreview.com/articles/1690347434/first-impressions-using-the-nikon-d800
"The D800's automatic ISO mode is inherited from the D4 and is improved over the same mode in earlier Nikon DSLRs. Previously, auto ISO customization was minimal, and consisted simply of an option to set the maximum ISO and minimum shutter speed when the camera was used in auto ISO mode. The currently-set ISO counted as the minimum ISO sensitivity (and in fact still does). This system was fine for shooting with a fixed focal length lens, but less useful with zoom lenses, where a 'safe' minimum shutter speed at either end of the focal range might be several stops apart.
In the D4 and D800, Nikon has (at long last) added an 'Auto' option to the minimum shutter speed options, which allows the camera to automatically set the minimum shutter speed based on its knowledge of the focal length that you're working at. This response can be biased in 5 steps, from 'slow' to 'fast' depending on whether you'd like the camera to err on the side of slower or faster shutter speeds. A small change but one that takes Auto ISO a little closer to being the 'set and forget' function that it should have been long ago."
The Auto-ISO implementation in the D800/D4 really is a world apart from Canon's clumsy approach - especially as far as the 5D3 goes.
Good thing is, Canon can easlily correct the situation any day with just a simple firmware update. ALl we need to do is to demand that update vigorously and might as well get it. Similar to what the video guys (Planet5D et al.) achieved for the 5D 2 after whacking Canon over the head for a year or so.
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