David Rasberry
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I did not like the motion blur on the GH2 in that Dale video. It looked very ethereal, kind of ghost like.
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Speaking for my 7D... Canon doesn't have to do much to make me more content. I have a short list, that I'll rehash here- but its not my real point.
An OLPF designed for 1080p (which will solve a lot of moire issues)
A full size HDMI output
RCA, MiniXLR or XLR audio inputs
Audio gain controls- software is fine, a la 5DMK2
Improve audio recording to PCM
Improve HDMI output to full frame rate full resolution with no overlays during recording.
Provision for more than one pin to secure the camera to a tripod.
I'd like a better arrangement for external power
I'd like it to have an electronic shutter. (which would make the camera less complicated and make it more readily adaptable to PL lenses.)
That would make a very nice video camera. Certainly something that competes well with the AF100.
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I did not like the motion blur on the GH2 in that Dale video. It looked very ethereal, kind of ghost like.
I did not like the motion blur on the GH2 in that Dale video. It looked very ethereal, kind of ghost like.
That's all well and good, but the Canon photo division won't be doing any of that to their photo cameras.
"$6,789.95 x 11.5 = $78,084.42 that's pretty close to 79,641.00 of Alexa price."
Sanjin, i could agree with your argument if equipment cost would be the only consideration in a movie budget. But gear is only a fraction of the total. Besides that you rent, you don´t buy. So unless you do a lowest-budget production yourself, you may just buy equipment like the AF100 and hope for the best. But even then, I doubt if you would not try to borrow gear for free. Buying stuff like this is for gadgeteers* or for anybody, who only wants to work on corporate or TV productions on the cheap.
*Interesting that the `prosumer industry´ is turning out the next best thing every 2 years. Initial cost is always around 5-6000 USD:
JVC HD-100 - oh it´s HDV PRO!
Sony EX1 - it´s CineAlta all the way for 6.000 only!
Sony EX3 - how much better can it get? (only $ 3.000 more!)
Canon D5MkII - `cinema look and feel´ for (almost) everybody! (but you want this cool rig, this cool monitor, this cool finder - and maybe a lens ...)
Panasonic A100 - you don´t want to wait for Scarlet, right?
This is why I like Jim Jannard´s motto to make obsolescence obsolete.
I dont understand exactly what you mean with your explanation (small) but as I said it doesnt matter what it can do , its what you can do with it that counts.
That's all well and good, but the Canon photo division won't be doing any of that to their photo cameras.
Images from new Panasonic 1605 4-megapixel effective pixels / 3 LiveMOS type sensors that can be found at GH2 and AF100 have nothing to do with other moire/aliasing artifacts found at many other DSLR video shots.
Also images from that new Panasonic sensor implemented in GH2/AF100 are crystal clear with well known beautiful color reproduction that made Panasonic famous years ago.
The Boxer: A short film made with the Panasonic Lumix GH2>>>
A $400 Go Pro HD can get better images then all the cameras mentioned in this thread. How? size.
No not really.
I have seen GOPro HD underwater footage shot underwater side by side with a 5dmkii in an underwater housing.
The GoPro looked downright soft compared to the Canon, as it should since the sensor in the 5d is so much larger.
The Go Pro housing is not really designed for underwater use.
Here is a website selling "fix-it" kits.
http://www.eyeofmine.com/gopro/underwater/
The designers of Go Pro made it "waterproof" from the standpoint of mounting on surfboards and boats and such. They never imagined it would try to be used as a dedicated underwater camera.