www.talkphotography.co.uk
www.talkphotography.co.uk
(they weren't keen on the Olympus M4/3 something to do with company being taken over or something, but hey that is just an opinion)
www.43rumors.com
Moon over the beach. GM5 and 20mm f1.7,
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Down amongst the grass.
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My favourite picture from the day. We bought this book at a dog charity shop as we're both dog lovers but it's actually quite a hard read for someone who's first language is not English.
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Yes. All three pictures were taken at Redcar pointing towards Marske and then Saltburn.
I'd taken my car in for a service at a garage in Marske and we then normally walk to either Saltburn or Redcar. Mrs WW prefers to walk to Redcar as there are more shops whilst I prefer Saltburn for the funicular rail lift, pier and general scenery.
The best place for fossils is round about the Marske area, I always look when we walk on the beach.
The walk there and back is normally around 16k-18k steps.
My G9 is permanently married to the 100~400. I was persuaded into buying the G9 when I went out to buy the zoom. There was a substantial discount offered on the two together plus genuinely interest free credit, so I treated myself. It's proved itself as the best long lens system I have used so I've no regrets whatsoever.So now the "I'm not looking for anymore lenses" starts lol


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On another note, I have stuck some 64gb scandisk extreme 170 mb/s cards in the G9 as my other 300 mb/s cards are in my S5. Will these be okay, or should I buy new memory cards that are the higher speed? I don't use video if that helps.
They say it's good to format your card in camera regularly ... cleans it up, makes it faster.Those are the read speeds. You need to compare the write speeds to see if there's really much difference between them but I would strongly suspect that you'll be fine with the slower cards unless you're taking long bursts in RAW.
I do that every time, and I never download from the camera, only via a card reader. Never had any card errors.They say it's good to format your card in camera regularly ... cleans it up, makes it faster.
The GH6 has been leaked to death in the last day or two ... masses of videos on yootoob.I see from a rumor site there's a GH6 coming, It's not something I'll be interested in buying but I'll watch and read the reviews.
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First leaked Panasonic GH6 images!
Asobinet spotted the first images of the Panasonic GH6. Official specs: Newly developed processor image sensor Unlimited recording 4: 2: 2 10bit DCI 4K 60p…www.43rumors.com
The SD card is a sliding connection with nice large contact areas so more likely to survive repeated use than a tiny USB socket.I always download from the camera never a card reader, my theory being that constant removal and insertion of the card into and out of the slot in the camera could cause connection problems. This was because I remember from my computing days how few insertions some backplanes were rated for.
In reality though there's no way around the making and breaking of connections as if I'm not removing and reinserting the memory card I'm plugging in and unplugging a USB cable.
Wireless is the way forward![]()
And backplanes exert higher pressure on the terminals, hence the use of zero force insertion tools (on IBM mainframes at least).The SD card is a sliding connection with nice large contact areas so more likely to survive repeated use than a tiny USB socket.
The SD card is a sliding connection with nice large contact areas so more likely to survive repeated use than a tiny USB socket.
And backplanes exert higher pressure on the terminals, hence the use of zero force insertion tools (on IBM mainframes at least).
Oh, I’ve had cards fail in IBM mainframes. Had to get them couriered up by motorbike at night from Greenford stores. But yes, a large amount of failures on electronic equipment in all fields, particularly cars, are down to poor connections.Waaaaay back I worked in the repair dept of Systime computers and I sat there all day repairing kit to component level. Later when I repaired whole units which connected to other things I was amazed that unplugging something and plugging it back in cured a problem, a connection problem. Later still when I got out of the repair centre and into field repair I found that connection problems were the norm with some kit. As you mentioned IBM, with some IBM kit I never came across a true electronic fault, it was always a connection problem or some other mechanical issue.
I've never had a card slot or a USB plug fail on a camera, but the reluctance to break and remake internal connections such cards into slots has stayed with me, possibly without any real reason![]()
Until the late '70s I only worked on room-sized mainframes. Mainly IBM, but latterly Data General.My favourite brand of desktop kit in the early 1980s was Olivetti. The M21/M24 series just never caused trouble. I'm sure someone else will report a different experience, though.
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RDOS or AOS?...but latterly Data General.
AOS - not that I can remember much about it now.RDOS or AOS?