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And don't ever talk about your purchases online (esp. Facebook) before actually making the purchase.Simple : it's easier to ask for forgiveness than permission. Of course wear a helmet in the process.lol
Having used a real cast iron pan for a little while now, I finally understand the whole "angry housewife with a frying pan" stereotype that started "back in the day", of course today with our aluminum and Teflon pans no one would know that one can be used with intent to kill!British women use the rolling pin rather than the frying pan. Less washing up.
I'm certainly curious as well and see what this thing may have under its hood. Hard not to be curious at least but even more important for us working Pros with the market sliding south and it's happening to me next week is I am shooting part of a job with video. So to stay relevant to the market as a still shooter we may just have to take video on to put food on the table. In the past I have turned some work down because of video. More important though if we need it we have the glass for it mostly and we could always rent it too. End of day glad its out here to get access to it.IMO, that would heavily depend on the quality of pixels, as well as the applications.
The old Canon 1Ds was 11.1 meg … but that was ancient sensor tech that suffered badly from noise.
I admit to being curious about a small "fat pixel" FF camera for candid low light work. With the newer gapless CMOS technology, I wonder how big the pixels are?
- Marc
I just saw your thread here about A6000, and thanks for that, as i shouldn't risk buying it for nothing much, and i was thinking if i can use a lens direct to it without an adapter it may keep the AF speed fast enough.Tareq, my A6000 went back very quickly. Sure it focusses fast but it doesn't track effectively enough for sport IMHO, though it might be that merely using non tracking AF is fast enough for some subjects.