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I heard he also wears flares and flowery shirts with giant pointy collars. Don't worry, AlNets, I'll never give up my source!You are out of date.
I heard he also wears flares and flowery shirts with giant pointy collars. Don't worry, AlNets, I'll never give up my source!You are out of date.
That's a strap on, not an interchangeable lens system.You are out of date.
I'm talking tiny lenses. 18-800mm focal lengths in lenses a few cms long, where you can fit a whole array of primes and zooms in a pocket-sized container. Fundamentally a camera body and phony are similar in terms of hardware. I see nothing wrong with the idea of sharing tech, so maybe a body you can drop a phone into to provide camera controls and a lens mount to the phone's sensor. Then take it out of the body and use it as your PC with wireless KB+M+display. Then connect it up to the TV and play console games on it.However, I find the premise of someone wanting to carry around a lense or lenses but has a problem with carrying the camera itself, pretty odd.
That's a strap on, not an interchangeable lens system.
I'm talking tiny lenses. 18-800mm focal lengths in lenses a few cms long, where you can fit a whole array of primes and zooms in a pocket-sized container. Fundamentally a camera body and phony are similar in terms of hardware. I see nothing wrong with the idea of sharing tech, so maybe a body you can drop a phone into to provide camera controls and a lens mount to the phone's sensor. Then take it out of the body and use it as your PC with wireless KB+M+display. Then connect it up to the TV and play console games on it.
The lens doesn't match with the sensor but goes through the iPhone lens. Hence it's a strap on. An interchangeable lens system replaces the entire lens in front of the sensor, matching every element as per the lens design.You can buy adapters that allow your iphone to take advantage of SLR lenses from different manufacturers. You may call it a "strap on" but you can technically call any adapter that allows a SLR camera to use lenses from different manufacturers a "strap on".
The major cost of lenses is the glass. Small lenses are cheaper. Tiny lenses needing fewer and smaller lens elements will be far cheaper and more portable. It's The Future!Someone may some day produce tiny interchangeable lenses that give SLR like quality. But thats a limited market because not many (especially professionals) are going to buy them when it will probably be cheaper to buy regular lenses whose cost of production aren't burden with minimization...
If people were happy with their lenses, lens sales would have stopped - they last a long time! People keep buying lenses because 1) They're expensive so you can only get one once in a while. 2) You can always get a better quality version of your current lens unless you're a crazy, rich pro. 3) People change model and format.I imagine any one who is already heavily invested in this hobby to be more readily attracted to a strap on that allows them use of their current stock of lenses, where the biggest chunk of their investment probably lies.
I've never tried a Windows Phone, but has had Android for a long while. Sometimes the charger doesn't work, it works with USB now. Today while signing in this forum from my PC and without touching the phone, it suddenly turned off, my Samsung Galaxy was stuck on "downloading... do not turn off target" "Factory Mode" (in red letters) for whatever reason. Add to that the poor battery management, and other features I don't lije, I hope to have a phone that I can integrate with a more unified set of services.Last I've seen it has longer animation, not a better speed. Apps were supposed to be universal since Win8.
The lens doesn't match with the sensor but goes through the iPhone lens. Hence it's a strap on. An interchangeable lens system replaces the entire lens in front of the sensor, matching every element as per the lens design.
The major cost of lenses is the glass. Small lenses are cheaper. Tiny lenses needing fewer and smaller lens elements will be far cheaper and more portable. It's The Future!
If people were happy with their lenses, lens sales would have stopped - they last a long time! People keep buying lenses because 1) They're expensive so you can only get one once in a while. 2) You can always get a better quality version of your current lens unless you're a crazy, rich pro. 3) People change model and format.
Hear me and heed my wise words - one day someone will introduce a new camera with curved sensors and cheaper glass, and the photo world will take note. And then someone will produce tiny cameras (probably superzooms rather than interchangeables) and a cameraphone with a 28-400mm zoom built in, and it'll be popular.
I'm presently eyeing a tiny superzoom because it packs so much camera into such a portable space. Quality isn't what I'd like, but it's so dinky and has such a wide range, it'll get far more use than my interchangeables.
I'm not sure what you're getting at. Photographers are doing this with the introduction of compact interchangeables, because they're more portable than SLRs and have cheaper, lighter lenses. But I'm talking about a massive shift to tiny, cheap lenses which still retain quality. That's something you can't have now. Unless you believe that every photographer with a pack of 4 kgs of heavy glass and a need for two flight cases when going on holiday would rather lump that around than a hip-bag with a full range of lenses of equal quality, how can you argue that smaller, lighter and cheaper without compromising visual quality (possibly improving it) isn't going to be significant?Then why aren't any of us dropping quarter size lenses that cost a quarter on our SLR cameras right now!!! LOL.
I've never tried a Windows Phone, but has had Android for a long while. Sometimes the charger doesn't work, it works with USB now. Today while signing in this forum from my PC and without touching the phone, it suddenly turned off, my Samsung Galaxy was stuck on "downloading... do not turn off target" "Factory Mode" (in red letters) for whatever reason. Add to that the poor battery management, and other features I don't lije, I hope to have a phone that I can integrate with a more unified set of services.
If I can use it with my PC, console or tablet, then I can see why switching from Android to Windows Phone makes sense in my case.
I'm not sure what you're getting at. Photographers are doing this with the introduction of compact interchangeables, because they're more portable than SLRs and have cheaper, lighter lenses. But I'm talking about a massive shift to tiny, cheap lenses which still retain quality. That's something you can't have now. Unless you believe that every photographer with a pack of 4 kgs of heavy glass and a need for two flight cases when going on holiday would rather lump that around than a hip-bag with a full range of lenses of equal quality, how can you argue that smaller, lighter and cheaper without compromising visual quality (possibly improving it) isn't going to be significant?
I know I've basically given up packing my Nikon FX DSLR, lenses, tripod, and other miscellaneous shit when I travel, go hiking, or backpacking. I'd love a lighter system.