k-hawinkler
Well-known member
A few shots with the E-M1.2.
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Lovely capture!A few shots with the E-M1.2.
Sorry to hear that! Hope they fix this problem soon!My E-M1 Mark II has frozen up several times.
I don't recall all the details when that happened.
Taking the battery out of the camera solved the problem.
Taking the battery only out of the PBH didn't work.
However, when I unmounted and remounted the lens that unfroze the E-M1.2.
I have to keep an eye on that. No doubt the camera needs a firmware update.
Luckily I am already used to dealing with such issues, thanks to my Leica M9.:banghead:
Oh well, give 'em time.
Thank you Bart. I formatted the 2 Lexar cards with their Image Rescue 5 app.Wow - spectacular shots, K-H :thumbs:
I'd say that 'Eye Priority' seems to be an option worth trying.Thank you Bart. I formatted the 2 Lexar cards with their Image Rescue 5 app.
So far, so good! The E-M1.2 focuses really fast. If one is close enough then the camera even focuses on the intended subjects. I still have to learn how to generate a smaller focus area. Apparently to accomplish that one has to assign a button. :grin:
Thanks Bart, 'Eye Priority' seems to work well with humans.I'd say that 'Eye Priority' seems to be an option worth trying.
Question is if the camera is not getting confused ...
Well, there was this post on FB (public group: Olympus E-M1II)Thanks Bart, 'Eye Priority' seems to work well with humans.
Even with human faces (like politicians) on TV.
But I doubt it works with birds.
Is there irrefutable evidence for animals to the contrary?
Absolutely, 40 feet seems quite a distance for catching a little bird's eye.Thanks Bart. So eye focus on Robin at 40 feet, really? :loco: Fake news, maybe? :facesmack:
Thanks Bart.Absolutely, 40 feet seems quite a distance for catching a little bird's eye.
But as I said: give it a try ...
Did you really thought for one moment you could catch that bird's eye ... :grin:I don't think I could have achieved focus with my other cameras for the following 2 situations.
Focus on contrail.