You are a wedding photographer.... you are under contract to produce a wedding album and a number of stills of important moments, and you have a negotiated delivery date. That is your job, not producing facebook updates. If your client wants social media updates, add it into the contract and even hire a second (or third) shooter just for that task. As a pro, you deliver the goods, no mater what they are.....mkabi said:unfocused said:People aren't getting the point.
Camera manufacturers have utterly failed their customers.
Why is it that the only person at a wedding who cannot take a picture of the bride feeding the groom the first slice of wedding cake and have the picture on the bride's Facebook page within a few minutes is the same person who is being paid to take pictures?
And, if the paid photographer did try to do that, he or she would need a Rube Goldberg combination of devices, media and interfaces.
Photographers should be able to take a picture, review it on the back of their camera, make a few simple adjustments (cropping, exposure, color correction) and hit a "send" button to get that photo to the client or directly to social media or a website.
The fact that no manufacturer offers that capability today shows just how miserably camera manufacturers have failed their customers.
That's what this article and the much better Mayflower Concepts Presentation (that the article links to and which has been previously discussed here) are talking about.
Tom Scott's work around only underscores this. There is no reason photographers should settle for such work arounds. It ought to be right there on the camera. And, if you need a larger screen, it ought to migrate to your iPad or laptop automatically, without having to use cables or complicated interfaces. It should just work.
That's what Apple understands.
The interesting thing is that while this may be mostly an inconvenience for enthusiasts, it is a complete fail for the professional market.
I can't tell you how frustrating it is to cover an event for a client, go home to start processing pictures and see on the client's Facebook page a couple dozen horrible pictures from the same event that some fool with an iPhone posted while I was uploading images to my computer. Think about virtually every breaking news event of the last several years -- the first pictures and video usually comes from an iPhone, not from a professional photojournalist covering the event.
The inability to instantly get pictures from the camera to the internet creates lost opportunities and those lost opportunities ultimately mean lost revenue and a more difficult struggle to retain the few remaining jobs for professional photographers. (When I go to a press conference, the Chicago Tribune reporter will be tweeting the event with pictures using her iPhone, while the poor AP photographer has to wait until he gets back to the bureau before he can send any pictures. Is it any wonder that fewer and fewer news organizations are employing photographers?)
This is what Canon, Nikon and all the other manufacturers have missed and it's hurting photographers in very concrete ways.
Lets just say, tomorrow Samsung did that... lets just say with the introduction of the NX2.
Those "simple adjustments" is going to take up time no? Not to mention, selecting a picture from the multitude of pictures, checking for focus etc.
Can you afford to waste time at an event where micro-moments may happen? Your uncle tom, who is not being paid, has a crappy camera, can waste all the time he wants posting on facebook (or other social network).
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