I will see your 256 and raise you a 512 card.32???? I have 256 hahahahah


I will see your 256 and raise you a 512 card.32???? I have 256 hahahahah
BUT, do you actually have that? I'm calling rubbish lol.I will see your 256 and raise you a 512 card.32???? I have 256 hahahahah
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Yes but not in a camera. Have an old iMac that the hard drive was starting to go bad. With the iMac you can put an SD card in the slot and make it your boot disk. I got one of these, put the operating system on it and some games for the granddaughters and it works just fine for them to play their games. They are four and six so the games that are on it are not that large in terms of size.BUT, do you actually have that? I'm calling rubbish lol.I will see your 256 and raise you a 512 card.32???? I have 256 hahahahah
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I am into batch work with Linux / Gimp scripts, was very useful with some recent copy projects and saved a lot of time. Sharpen, tone curve, and a dynamic light type bump.. Results were good, guy was happy. I have recently been using that Nikon software on those 150-600 testing and find it pretty useful. I like the active d lighting slider a lot. Just a little bump almost every time.... and as I loosely understand, this can be done with picture control loaded in menu of camera. Lord knows I have enough hardware laying around to put a Windows box together as I can't seem to get Nikon software to play nice in Linux / using Wine.Nikon Picture Control Editor.
Nikon Picture Control Editor
MOST people here cannot edit images this well. Try it.
Maybe figure out WHY Nikon developed this set of tools for their cameras.
Apparently, automated image handling suuuuuuuucks. Apparently Nikon's engineering development was utterly foolish to design a way to make a camera with a computer in it able to tailor an image file.
Think again.
Just to balance the equation a bit.Hi everyone. So I now know the cons/pros for shooting in RAW vs JPEG and why for picture details and editing is far better to shoot RAW. Now, what I was not able to find yet is the difference between those two vs the option that combines both in the camera. Aside from creating a larger file (I assume it combines or saves two pictures, one in RAW and another in JPEG). So question here is, what are the benefits, if any, to use this RAW+JPEG fine option, or should I still be aiming to use RAW only?
Thanks.
Once again, so-called "experts" who simply CAN NOT SEE that there are many,many,many people who simply do not possess the editing skills do perform operations like noise reduction on say, 500 to 1,500 images files from a weekend shoot, or a wedding, or whatever.
Once again, after a long, lengthy logical and reasonable report on how something works with new gear, I read words like "pointless" and "useless". Typical narrow-minded ignorance and an unwillingness to look at anybody else's working methods. Unable to tailor an answer to a first-time or new poster.
TIme to step back from your "expert" perches and wise up, and start looking at the Original Poster who poses a question, and start trying to help other people.
Typical JPEG BAD! RAW IS KING! attitudes. Typical responses. Major overkill
Not impressed by the inability to answer a simple question from the point of view. Not impressed by the inability to see ANYTHING except the way you, personally, decree that photos must be handled.
Typical let's convert a handful of selects attitudes here. Those who say "Storage is cheap!!!" and then proclaim, "so only shoot raw." Well, if storage is so cheap, then why not stop being a space-pinching retentive, and just keep a JPEG file as a reference on separate media... JFC...a single DVD disc of JPEGS can show the image contents of a multi terrabyte hard drive. So,so smart yet so,so blinded by dogmatic, limited thinking...
NOT EVERYBODY wants to **** around converting every single ******* image from a 20 to 40 megabyte .NEF or .CR2 raw...
If you are editing in LR (Note Image below is of an older version of LR).Thanks everyone for all your valuable input, really appreciated. As Derrel said, I am in the very early stages of my photography skills. I see the importance in RAW to have greater control and I hope to get to a point where my skills get me to better photo editing experience. I think based on comments, my best route is to continue shooting RAW+JPEG and keep learning the editing basics with the JPEG files in lightroom. As I continue to get comfortable, I might do some of my editing from RAW to start practicing in parallel and gain experience.