- Books - ebooks and paperbound
- Podcasts
- Youtube Channels
- Instagram, Flickr, etc
A few details will emerge as my journey continues and terminology begins to take hold. Visit the website for PhotoActive Podcast with Jeff Carlson and Kirk McElhearn - many episodes but #52 iPhone 11 and Semantic Rendering also covering "computational photography"is a good place to start. This is not to say you need the latest iPhone for our seminar, but these guys cover the direction Apple is heading with camera technology. For instance:
- iPhone has multiple cameras with dedicated sensors - Ultra-Wide no optical stabilization and can't shoot RAW or do Night Mode, less pixel density
- iPhone X and beyond - cameras take multiple frames to blend together - smart HDR and now rapid blending of multiple frames
- Telephoto and zoom lenses are still DSLR/Mirrorless domain
- Night mode using a tripod will length exposures over hand-held still needs some light
- Pet Portrait mode now available
- Todd Hido has interesting landscapes and suburbia
Many roads lead to Rome and many photographers read DP Review - Digital Photography Review for details on hardware but also read the member forums where sharing of challenges and possible solutions are offered by real world users. Read the iOS Forum.
Are you still using a Mirrorless or DSLR camera? Are you interesting in upgrading to a new camera body or system? Will an iPad be your out-and-about editing platform? Then take note of the file sizes produced by the new camera. Go to a local camera store for research - take a few pictures in RAW and in just JPG. Then at home, load them into the iPad and your favorite editor. Personally, my question is do I need a full-frame camera with a huge file size to capture and render the subjects? My Nikon 7000 is a APS-C 16MP sensor.
Watch for more soon
Are you still using a Mirrorless or DSLR camera? Are you interesting in upgrading to a new camera body or system? Will an iPad be your out-and-about editing platform? Then take note of the file sizes produced by the new camera. Go to a local camera store for research - take a few pictures in RAW and in just JPG. Then at home, load them into the iPad and your favorite editor. Personally, my question is do I need a full-frame camera with a huge file size to capture and render the subjects? My Nikon 7000 is a APS-C 16MP sensor.
Watch for more soon