I would go back and forth with you all night but I don't think it would get us very far. There are solutions to all of those problems and I don't think the popup flash is the correct one.LetTheRightLensIn said:oh really?
and suppose something unexpected happens and you are close but have no flash and they need a shot and there is terrible back lighting?
it's happened to me and others and it was interesting to see all the pros asking to borrow the xxD people had for the shot and tossing their 1D's to the side
or maybe you are on a trip and mostly taking landscapes but then want a few shots with friends now and then and don't wanna be dragging a flash along, just one more thing to be a menace and a drag
great if you happen to run around EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME, with a reflector
maybe you are coming back at night and suddenly a tree frog pops out?
maybe the Stanley Cup came for a secret visit without prior announcement and they want one pick and everyone is backlit and it has to be taken in that direction and you were not on call but happened to just have your camera with you but no flash and nobody else was close enough to make it in time? I was sure glad I was still using an xxD camera then and, for the record, so was the other guy who showed up and tossed his 1D aside and used my xxD for his shot too. He didn't thumb his nose at the xxD and get all snooty and ridiculous, he was just like awesome, this is great, gotta love the pop-up, all cameras should have this.
etc.
benperrin said:I would go back and forth with you all night but I don't think it would get us very far. There are solutions to all of those problems and I don't think the popup flash is the correct one.LetTheRightLensIn said:oh really?
and suppose something unexpected happens and you are close but have no flash and they need a shot and there is terrible back lighting?
it's happened to me and others and it was interesting to see all the pros asking to borrow the xxD people had for the shot and tossing their 1D's to the side
or maybe you are on a trip and mostly taking landscapes but then want a few shots with friends now and then and don't wanna be dragging a flash along, just one more thing to be a menace and a drag
great if you happen to run around EVERYWHERE, ALL THE TIME, with a reflector
maybe you are coming back at night and suddenly a tree frog pops out?
maybe the Stanley Cup came for a secret visit without prior announcement and they want one pick and everyone is backlit and it has to be taken in that direction and you were not on call but happened to just have your camera with you but no flash and nobody else was close enough to make it in time? I was sure glad I was still using an xxD camera then and, for the record, so was the other guy who showed up and tossed his 1D aside and used my xxD for his shot too. He didn't thumb his nose at the xxD and get all snooty and ridiculous, he was just like awesome, this is great, gotta love the pop-up, all cameras should have this.
etc.
Anyway, it's all a pointless discussion. Canon won't include a popup flash on the 5d and 1d series anyway.
dilbert said:On models with a built-in flash, it also doubles as a strobe for AF assistance.
Back on some of the EOS SLRs, there was a separate red light for that.
With the 1D and 5D series, there is no AF assist at all.
benperrin said:The pop up flash is pure garbage. An on camera small light source is always a bad idea even as an optical flash trigger. There is no point in including this on a professional camera.
PhotographyFirst said:The AF assist on my Elan IIe actually saved my life once when we got stuck out in frigid weather at night with a broken flashlight.
oh really?
and suppose something unexpected happens and you are close but have no flash and they need a shot and there is terrible back lighting?
vscd said:oh really?
and suppose something unexpected happens and you are close but have no flash and they need a shot and there is terrible back lighting?
If you carry a 1D Pro Series camera and you have no flash you should set up the ISOIf you miss it to a real shoot you should think about your job. Popup-flashes are really useless, they do nothing except of flashing something near to death. It's not the problem to have it in the cam, it's the problem that you carry it with the cam for 99% of the time, not using it. You make the body bigger, heavier, more prone to water and the viewfinder is more complicated for a decent 100% view. The flash even sucks on your batterylife. You can Put a 270EX on your Body every time you go out.
Nikon has a flash in the body? Wow. Leica doesn't. And the real Pro Models are D3s and D4 not the D800... guess what. They have no flash 8)
AvTvM said:quite funny to argue with size constraints for a tiny pop-up flash with respect to a BEHEMOTH Canon EOS 1D body. ;D
AvTvM said:That's what I would consider "professional". And it would be UNIQUE for Canon. No Nikon or Sony has a RT flash system. And more 600EX-RTs would probably be sold ... 8)
AvTvM said:Yongnuo and other "reverse engineering" Chinese manufacturers cannot possibly serve as a benchmark for what Canon might be able to built into their cameras ...![]()
AvTvM said:Antenna/s: always built into LCD bezel/frame on rear of camera. More than enough spacxe there. And no shielding metal either.
If you built in the LCD bezel/frame, only the rear is free of obstruction and shielding... the wifi might not work properly if you are in front of the camera and GPS might take very long to get a position lock. IMHO, people will probably complaint if you don't include the features, but if you include the features and it's not working properly, people will curse and swear... IMHO, if you cannot guarantee it'll work properly, it's better not to have it in the first place.AvTvM said:I can see no reason for not building a fully-blown "COMM" module into large DSLR bodies. With the following components, ALL of them - as in many small smartphones:
* WiFi - latest mainstream iteration (currently ac)
* NFC
* GPS
* Canon only: RT commander
all of them separatly switchable by user, of course.
Antenna/s: always built into LCD bezel/frame on rear of camera. More than enough spacxe there. And no shielding metal either.
And one version, in which the power cable to the COM module is not built in. For those markets where odd-ball communications laws and ferquency crap make communicating devices "illegal".
Problem solved, next please!![]()
AvTvM said:Yongnuo and other "reverse engineering" Chinese manufacturers cannot possibly serve as a benchmark for what Canon might be able to built into their cameras ...
I can see no reason for not building a fully-blown "COMM" module into large DSLR bodies. With the following components, ALL of them - as in many small smartphones:
* WiFi - latest mainstream iteration (currently ac)
* NFC
* GPS
* Canon only: RT commander
all of them separatly switchable by user, of course.
Antenna/s: always built into LCD bezel/frame on rear of camera. More than enough spacxe there. And no shielding metal either.
And one version, in which the power cable to the COM module is not built in. For those markets where odd-ball communications laws and ferquency crap make communicating devices "illegal".
Problem solved, next please!![]()
Lee Jay said:What makes you think I'm taking flash dominated exposures of people up close? I'm often using it for fill, and only occasionally of people.
benperrin said:Even for fill it is terrible. Use a reflector or modified flash off camera and the results are a lot better. Small light source in relation to the subject = harsh ugly light.
AvTvM said:As far as "professional" is concerned, I would expect either a (optical master capable) pop-up flash in any (large) DSLR body OR since we are in 2015 and talking about Canon ... an even tinier RT-radio wireless commander built right into the camera. Ideally in addition to pop-up flash, since the RT commander cannot provide fill flash capability in a pinch nor AF assist in a pinch.
Marsu42 said:The only reason apart from simply money grabbing I can come up with that it's difficult or near-impossible to build in an rt transmitter into the camera body. Remember that the flash sync *relies* on 100% valid split-second communication over potentially large distances, it's not like wifi "wait and re-transmit" or "update every other minute" gps.
weixing said:Hi,
If you built in the LCD bezel/frame, only the rear is free of obstruction and shielding... the wifi might not work properly if you are in front of the camera and GPS might take very long to get a position lock. IMHO, people will probably complaint if you don't include the features, but if you include the features and it's not working properly, people will curse and swear... IMHO, if you cannot guarantee it'll work properly, it's better not to have it in the first place.AvTvM said:I can see no reason for not building a fully-blown "COMM" module into large DSLR bodies. With the following components, ALL of them - as in many small smartphones:
* WiFi - latest mainstream iteration (currently ac)
* NFC
* GPS
* Canon only: RT commander
all of them separatly switchable by user, of course.
Antenna/s: always built into LCD bezel/frame on rear of camera. More than enough spacxe there. And no shielding metal either.
And one version, in which the power cable to the COM module is not built in. For those markets where odd-ball communications laws and ferquency crap make communicating devices "illegal".
Problem solved, next please!![]()
Have a nice day.