Sony Tidbits…

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What Is So Special About This Lens!? | Sony 50MM F1.2 GM

Today deals at Amazon, BHphoto, Adorama, Amazon DE, Amazon UK, Amazon FR, Amazon IT.
Best Sony APS-C Lenses for Landscape Photography | B&H Event Space
Sony UWP-D27 & Multi Interface (MI) Shoe | NAB 2022
How to Become a Travel Photographer for Expedition Outfitters (42West).
Dial It In with the Lume Cube RGB Panel Go LED Light (Explora).
Is the Viltrox full frame 24mm F1.8 worth it? (Maarten Heilbron).

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Sony A7r series group.
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Sony A7 series group.

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Canon might launch a 100+ Megapixel camera in late 2022. POLL: Should the Sony A7rV join the race or stick to the 61MP resolution?

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CanonRumors reports:

We have been told that Canon is indeed going to release a full-frame RF mount camera with 100+ megapixels some time in the first half of 2023. The announcement could come later in 2022.

If that’s true that Canon will be the first breaking the 100MP barrier in the Full Frame segment.

So far I have no solid rumor about the A7rV sensor resolution. I have been told Sony worked on at least two different sensor versions. The camera was supposed to be announced in early summer but due the semiconductor shortage the camera is more likely to be on the market in autumn. So now the big question for you is the following:

What sensor do you want on the A7rV?

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Dpreview reports that the Sony a7 IV firmware v1.01 “doesn’t change our conclusions”

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A7IV at BHphoto. Amazon. Adorama. FocusCamera. BuyDig.

Dpreview reports:

Firmware V1.01 for the Sony a7 IV included the promise that it ‘improves the accuracy of the Eye AF feature.’ Since this was one of the criticisms that held back the score of our review, we re-tested the camera to see whether the tendency to fractionally front-focus in eye AF mode has been resolved.

We confirmed with Sony that the update was intended to address Eye AF however it was activated; whether by assigning a button to the function or through its automatic use when ‘Face/Eye Priority in AF’ is turned on.’

Having tested the camera with multiple subjects and a number of lenses, we found the eye AF function can still tend to focus on eyelashes, rather than the subject’s pupil. It’s something you’ll only tend to see when shooting at fairly wide apertures but we still found we could get better results with manual focus.

We have included these findings in our review but cannot find enough of an improvement to revise our scoring.

In summary: We need one more firmware update Sony!

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Gigapixel AI v6.1 has just been released and you save $20 for a limited time

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Topaz just announced the new Gigapixel AI 6.1. You can find the long detailed list of improvement on this blog post.The new key feature  is the new face recovery mode!

Major Changes

  • New Face Recovery model – see post for details
  • Significantly faster processing on GTX 10, RTX 20, and RTX 30 series GPUs

Changes

  • Fixed black crop preview in large images
  • Improved wording of various tooltips/dialogs
  • Added slider to control face recovery strength
  • Improved blending around faces

And til June 2 you save 32 Dollars/Euro on the new software if you use the code “RUMOR” at checkout.

Reminder: You can use our checkout code “RUMOR” to get an additional 15% discount on all TOPAZ products (Click here) :

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APS-C E-mount trio lenses likely to be announced sometimes in June

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Image on top shows the Sony E 16-55mm F2.8 (image on top) which was the last APS-C lens announced by Sony back on Aug 28, 2019!

I have been told that all three new APS-C E-mount lenses should be announced sometimes in June. Here are the lens specs:

  • 11mm f/1.8 (17mm in Full Frame equivalent terms)
  • 15mm f/1.4 (22mm in Full Frame equivalent terms)
  • 10-20mm f/4.0 (15-30mm in Full Frame equivalent terms)
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Sony 24-70mm GM II Review at PCMag: “phenomenal optics into a slim, carry-friendly package”

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Preorders:
USA: BHphoto. Adorama. Amazon. FocusCamera. Henrys CA.
EU: Fotokoch DE. Calumet DE. FotoErhardt DE. Wex UK.
Asia: CameraPro AUS.

PcMag tested the new lens and concluded:

You can criticize Sony for replacing a lens it originally billed as future-proof, but the new FE 24-70mm F2.8 GM II is a worthwhile upgrade. First and foremost, it’s easier to carry—Sony has come a long way with miniaturization since it tipped the GM system. This slim zoom joins svelte lenses like the FE 70-200mm F2.8 GM II OSS, FE 50mm F1.2 GM, and FE 24mm F1.4 GM, all of which made us rethink how hefty well-corrected, bright aperture lenses should be. The redesign also adds useful on-lens controls for photo and video, something missing from Sony’s first take.

Internally, there’s a fresh optical formula that performs a bit better than the original on Sony’s most demanding camera sensor, the 60MP chip in the a7R IV. Furthermore, dual linear motors make focus performance a bit snappier, and picture quality is a little better than with the older lens. Aside from a bit of focus breathing, we don’t have many criticisms about the optics.

Despite excellent optics, the original FE 24-70mm F2.8 GM didn’t quite earn our Editors’ Choice award when we reviewed it, and it’s now a bit behind the times in terms of controls and design. You can still buy it for around $2,000, but we recommend you spend more to get the GM II—it’s a standout lens, and an Editors’ Choice winner.

Also DigitalCameraWorld published a full review and concluded:

There was absolutely nothing wrong with the original edition of Sony’s G Master trinity standard zoom, but the second incarnation is even better in every way. It packs a host of new features, improved handling characteristics and a completely redesigned optical path into a smaller, more lightweight build. It’s more comprehensively weather-sealed as well. The GM II is undeniably pricey, but you get what you pay for and more besides.

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