Anyone notice what camera kit Virgil uses in Homeland? He always gets the perfect shot of his target's face, and it looks like a light setup.
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pdirestajr said:Anyone notice what camera kit Virgil uses in Homeland? He always gets the perfect shot of his target's face, and it looks like a light setup.
That looks amazing. And a small camera like that is very discrete. I just wonder whether it would be any good at night?wookiee2cu said:Since he's not interested in photography, why not just pick up the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/889965-REG/Canon_PowerShot_SX50HS_Digital_Camera.html
50X optical zoom, 24-1200mm, 12.1MP, Full HD 1080p Video, Optical Image Stabilizer and High-Speed Burst HQ for 13fps Shooting.
Zlatko said:That looks amazing. And a small camera like that is very discrete. I just wonder whether it would be any good at night?wookiee2cu said:Since he's not interested in photography, why not just pick up the Canon PowerShot SX50 HS: http://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/889965-REG/Canon_PowerShot_SX50HS_Digital_Camera.html
50X optical zoom, 24-1200mm, 12.1MP, Full HD 1080p Video, Optical Image Stabilizer and High-Speed Burst HQ for 13fps Shooting.
aaronh said:Hi, I've got a friend in law enforcement who is asking me for a recommendation for lens/camera combo for surveillance. I naturally thought to extend the question to you all!
What would you recommend as a set-up for surveillance? My friend won't be able to spend a ton of time learning the ins and outs of it and he's not interested in photography as an art. He will need to use it time to time at night and won't be using a flash (obviously).
Your thoughts?
P.S. Budget doesn't necessarily matter. Unless you are concerned about the fact that our taxes will be footing the bill...![]()
jthomson said:http://www.dpreview.com/news/2007/3/8/sigma200500mm Perfect for low light surveillance.
Note that it comes in a discrete green colour. Not the crowd attracting white of Canon L lenses.
Each jurisdiction will have its own standard operating procedure for handling and post processing of photographs (whether taken by a police officer, the general public or CCTV security cameras). As long as the steps are followed, the photos will be admitted as evidence. If there are claims that the photo has been tampered with, the officer that took the photo will usually be required to testify that it is the photo they took. In the case of UV and IR forensic photographs, they might also have to explain any steps they've taken. The jury will weigh up the credibility of the police officer in coming to their verdict. In itself, nothing hard, but photographic evidence is obviously very damaging to a defendent, so they'll argue any way possible to have it excluded. The data security kit makes it a little harder to raise objections as it is one less step to overcome. (Yes - I watch a lot of CSI and Law & Order)Zlatko said:Canon offers a Data Security Kit for some cameras, although a quick google suggests it's been cracked.aaronh said:What does this mean: "Oh, and doesn't Canon have some kind of strong signing of an image that it comes from a person/camera? Maybe he should look into that, since it probably would help with chain of custody kind of thing for any evidence." Strong signing?
I was thinking the same. When real-time *** tracking was less ubiquitous I used to manufacture / sell battery powered devices with magnets etc that sent in data by GPRS. I had a few guys from the local undercover division visit for a demonstration to see how my $1.5K device compared with their $10K "law enforcement only" device that used a continuous data call that cost over $500 a day in comms costs.TexPhoto said:You guys are funny. ;D You think Law Enforcement is like in the movies. Unlimited budgets and computers that show you the fingerprints with cool noises as they check them.
TexPhoto said:You guys are funny. ;D You think Law Enforcement is like in the movies. Unlimited budgets and computers that show you the fingerprints with cool noises as they check them.
If your friend is sitting in a parking lot, that means he needs something reasonable for the inside of a car ( a 5 year old american sedan with lousy shocks and brakes). A crop DSLR and an 18-200 is probably where he wants to start. It is not unusual to shoot surveillance photos from 6 feet away, and the 18-200 gives tremendous range while easily handheld, and relatively inconspicuous. A large aperture lens like a 70-200 f2.8 will add to the night shooting ability.
Don Haines said:Every few days I get emails from the director of the FBI. I also get lots of offers of millions of dollars and apparantly there are several women in Russia that want to marry my cat..... don't believe everything you see on the internet.