AcutancePhotography said:
Don Haines said:
hire a second (or third) shooter just for that task.
That's an interesting strategy. Do any wedding photographers do this:
-Have one shooter doing the more traditional types of shots for the album, prints and such
-Have one shooter doing the JPEG-upload in real time to facebook/Social media?
I am not sure a bride will pay extra for the second, but you never know what a bride will want to pay for... or for someone else to pay for.
Let's try this again.
The point is very simple: In a world where connectivity is ubiquitous, ALL camera manufacturers have failed miserably in integrating connectivity to their devices. And, in doing so, they have placed professional photographers as a competitive disadvantage.
Yeah, there are workarounds. You can hire someone to take your filled cards and process a few images on a laptop while you shoot. But, the point is, you shouldn't
have to rely on work arounds.
There is no legitimate reason why cameras should not connect as easily to the internet as phones do. There is no reason at all that cameras should not have better tools for editing and adjusting images in-camera with an interface that is not just as good as a smart phone, but better.
No reason at all, except that the manufacturers have been lazy, cheap and clueless about the marketplace.
I presume that every photographer wants to build their business. Acutance, can you honestly tell me that at a wedding with 300 guests, you see absolutely no marketing value in being able to quickly find just five pictures you've shot, do sufficient editing to make them look good on the web, add your logo and upload those pictures to the bride's Facebook/Instagram/Twitter Feed before the end of the reception, so that there is a wave of people at the reception "liking" and sharing the photos and commenting on how great the bride looks? Guests sharing the pictures with their friends and relatives who are planning to get married? -- all before they leave for the night?
I presume that most wedding work comes from referrals from happy customers. Those five pictures are going to be seen by hundreds more people than will ever see the bride's wedding album. Is there no value to you to be able to have access to the potential customers that night, while they are all excited and their sales resistance has been lowered by the free bar? Those potential customers will have no trouble remembering who you are or finding you that night, because you are that guy with the good camera who has been shooting pictures all day.
I'm not just talking about wedding photography. As I said, photojournalists are handicapped by this lack of connectivity. Sports photographers (unless they shoot for the professional teams and can both afford expensive, complicated work arounds and also lock out amateur competition through restricted access) would also benefit from being able to send or post a few pictures during halftime without needing anything but their camera and maybe a personal hotspot from their phone. There are many others as well.
Yeah, as I said before, it's more of a benefit to professionals than amateurs who aren't under any time constraint to deliver a product. But, Canon, Nikon and Sony all claim to cater to the professional market, when they clearly have failed in this regard.
That's the point that the article and linked video are making.
And frankly, it's a heck of a lot more important that 1/4 stop of dynamic range that gets obsessed over constantly.