Aushiker
Well-Known Member
- Region
- Australia
- City
- Walyalup, Western Australia
Not owning an iPhone, nodo you clean your iphone lens before taking a picture?
Not owning an iPhone, nodo you clean your iphone lens before taking a picture?
That is correct. One of my friends is a Professor of Movie Art in London. It was the last decade when he showed a gig video shot with an iPhone to me and said with some indignation: 'This vid is better than what we could shoot with our professional equipment!" Of course, he would need to prepare the stage, and provide lighting to be able to make use of his professional gear. He was under a great impression of the wide-angle lens of iPhone!I do have to admit that iPhones seems to take better low-light gig photos than my mirrorless. I could probably get there with the R100, I can get results that are very similar, but I can't quite match the best iPhone shots.
I think it's doing some kind of on-board processing, because the iPhone photos seem to be more flattering than not only the R100 but also the mirror. I'm a little suspicious!
I use these lens protectors which I occasionally clean with an alcohol wipe.do you clean your iphone lens before taking a picture?
That is correct. One of my friends is a Professor of Movie Art in London. It was the last decade when he showed a gig video shot with an iPhone to me and said with some indignation: 'This vid is better than what we could shoot with our professional equipment!" Of course, he would need to prepare the stage, and provide lighting to be able to make use of his professional gear. He was under a great impression of the wide-angle lens of iPhone!
Are the drone use laws as strict in the UK as they are in the US? I'd love to take one on my rides, but with all the no fly zones, airport restrictions, licensing and registration requirements, I never know if I would be breaking some law. The FAA levies some pretty hefty fines for violations.yes, ease of use is everything when cycling, if you have to stop get the camera out of a backpack, find somewhere to put the pack down, take the shot put it all back on , you will miss loads of great shots because you cant be arsed.
The new drones are now 360 cameras, you just fly roughly about and the AI can auto construct epic cinematic footage.
Already FPV drone pilots are moaning it erodes their skills.
All very glamorous marketing, but it does actually do what it says on the tin.
yes, ease of use is everything when cycling, if you have to stop get the camera out of a backpack, find somewhere to put the pack down, take the shot put it all back on , you will miss loads of great shots because you cant be arsed.
The new drones are now 360 cameras, you just fly roughly about and the AI can auto construct epic cinematic footage.
Already FPV drone pilots are moaning it erodes their skills.
All very glamorous marketing, but it does actually do what it says on the tin.
I have a drone, a DJI Phantom 4. I have not used it in years. I used it for real estate photography and video, but that business has gone down the tubes. Any real estate agent can take good enough pictures with their smartphone. Plus, as restrictions grew, the entire city of San Diego became off limits. We have one big international airport, two military airports, and a bunch of civil aviation airports. Given that drones must fly five miles from airports, it means that virtually the entire city is a drone no-fly zone. I'm not complaining, given how many a**h*les would abuse the privilege.Are the drone use laws as strict in the UK as they are in the US? I'd love to take one on my rides, but with all the no fly zones, airport restrictions, licensing and registration requirements, I never know if I would be breaking some law. The FAA levies some pretty hefty fines for violations.
I have a drone, a DJI Phantom 4. I have not used it in years. I used it for real estate photography and video, but that business has gone down the tubes. Any real estate agent can take good enough pictures with their smartphone. Plus, as restrictions grew, the entire city of San Diego became off limits. We have one big international airport, two military airports, and a bunch of civil aviation airports. Given that drones must fly five miles from airports, it means that virtually the entire city is a drone no-fly zone. I'm not complaining, given how many a**h*les would abuse the privilege.