unfocused said:
Nethawk said:
unfocused said:
kphoto99 said:
c.d.embrey said:
Some reasons.
1. A DSLR won't fit in your pocket/purse.
2. A DSLR won't post a photo to Instagram or Facebook.
3. A DSLR doesn't have apps like Snapseed or Perfectly Clear available.
Nothing can be done about 1, but there is no reason that a DSLR could not do 2 and 3.
A point I've been trying to make as well. Camera manufacturers are behaving like dinosaurs when it comes to social media and connectivity.
Said it before and will say it again – it's pathetic that no manufacturer has produced a DSLR that gives the professional photographer a fighting chance to post pictures from the wedding before the guests do with their iPhones.
We expect brides to pay thousands of dollars for a wedding photographer and then the pictures on her Facebook page are a bunch of shots from camera phones because they can be uploaded instantly.
Until a paid photographer has the tools to post pictures straight to a customer's Facebook from the back of the camera, manufacturers are failing their customers.
Yeah, and a lens on the back for selfies too please?
I do hope this was a post made with sarcasm in mind, if not can I just say :

?
Hardly.
Any photographer who hopes to make a living in the business needs to be mindful of what the customers want. Like it or not, many customers want and expect instant gratification. They have grown up with social media being the primary form for sharing photographs.
I suspect that when customers hire professional photographers they want something slightly better than shoot and post, just a bit more than what guests are going to be doing with their iPhones (ok, maybe not Apple fanboys). Despite all those great shots on Facebook, people still hire photographers. Imagine that.
I don't have any thoughts either way, other than being grateful that my own wedding photos were not done by a hack who presumes because of social media I might accept mediocrity.
If you have not met someone who carries their entire family album on their phone, you live a very sheltered life.
Sure, I have lots of 14 year old friends. I'm not sure why this is relevant though.
I'm merely suggesting that competitive photographers tend to be mindful of their customers desires, and camera manufacturers who hope to serve their customers (photographers) need to make that easier to do.
I used a wedding photographer as an example, but there are many others. A sports photographer shooting a high school game, a photographer covering a breaking news event, almost any situation where the photographer needs to get an image posted (which is today's equivalent of publication) quickly.
It's already easier. Do you remember that stuff we once called film? There are multiple methods of getting photography to print that work today. More on this later, when I try to get just what it is you want camera manufacturers to do.
Let's imagine a little story: A state legislative committee is conducting a hearing on a controversial measure. The hearing room is packed. The "professional" photographer is clicking away at the person at the witness table. Someone else pulls out an iPhone and snaps a few pictures. The iPhone user then uploads the pictures to his Twitter feed.
The "professional" photographer goes back to the office, where he is met by his editor who says, "never mind, we already posted a picture that some guy took at the hearing and put on his Twitter feed. Oh, and the publisher has decided that it will be cheaper to just give iPhones to the reporters covering these things in the future. That means we don't need the photo staff, so here's your two week's severance pay."
That was a fun little trip down fantasy lane, now back to reality. What you describe is illegal, not to mention ridiculously melodramatic.
Perhaps you are so successful and confident that your customers will gladly and patiently wait for the pictures you shoot, but I strongly suspect that there are many photographers out there that need the competitive edge that having the ability to edit a few shots in camera and post them to a client's social media in real time would give them.
Oh, wait just a minute! Edit a few shots? But, but, the twitter guy could beat me to the punch! Your real time argument just went to hell, just sayin'
I suspect you suspect correctly, but if those photographers haven't figured it out yet without overburdening our camera bodies then they should probably just get an iPhone and an Instagram account.
Obviously, there is nothing that compels anyone to use the features if they become available, but manufacturers are not serving their professional base if they can't offer this simple and ubiquitous technology to their customers.
So what is it exactly that you want, what needs to be added to a camera to compete with Hello Kitty? A cellular 4G radio? Should it also make phone calls, perhaps to call our editors and beg forgiveness for the few minutes delay? Instant cloud upload? A Facebook, Twitter, Instagram app, a contacts list complete with social media addresses of all customers? Once we stuff all of that into our cameras, will it still be simple and ubiquitous?
Maybe you should think this one through, and get back to us just how this instant social media gratification can become reality for the Facebook age. Personally, I'm really hoping your vision also includes the aforementioned selfie cam.
I'd much rather manufacturers continue to stay focused on the photograph and not the business of photography.