09-04-2018, 01:45 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-04-2018, 01:46 PM by Brightcolours.)
I just never understood why Nikon does that (well, I think it is to sell more expensive grips). That is all the so what I have, about it.
The EOS R will be introduced tomorrow.
Well, I do not get the "more juice" for the same thing, just repeating itself. And somehow Canon seems to avoid the same thing?
09-04-2018, 09:12 PM
(This post was last modified: 09-04-2018, 09:13 PM by JJ_SO.)
You mean, pointing the camera to one spot, activating the focus trap and hope a bird is stupid enough to land on it or at least fly through slowly enough? Funny, this feature I somehow never missed - and the AF is fast enough to catch them. But stupid me would have said "yes it has" as there's a kind of "focus priority" in the AF settings. It just doesn't act as focus trap, only blocking the shutter unreliably. :/ which also adds the kind of random composition like a focus trap. And your's, can you tap on the screen and it takes a picture? Also kind of randomly depending on skin tone, I guess.
So basically, Magic Lantern adds features other cameras do not have. And yes, my EOS M takes a picture (if you want to) when you tap the screen, they do so since 2012.
Are we done with the pissing contest yet?