Stephanie Brim
Mental Experimental.
Odd. I don't get anything. It may be because I'm on a Mac, but I don't know. I dislike ActiveX myself.
RJBender said:I wonder how Bill's opening went. I hope he didn't pick up a pack of cigs on the way home.
R.J.
copake_ham said:Absolutely not!
I said "home system"
I have Norton strapped on real tight here. If it tells me there is an Active X trying to get in and it's not from a site I am cool with - it doesn't get in.
Viruses are bad - real bad.
Been there, done that.
I'm not paranoid about this. When I do a MS update I get the same warning but I override it.
But I don't know where Socke's link is coming from so I'm not willing to override the warning. 😱
Socke said:That's very good feedback for me!
The company doing the website is a 100% Microsoft shop. I read the site with Firefox and had some fights until it worked.
The picture upload and the content editor are Active-X controlls and I configured all the office PCs not to accept Active-X and ActiveScripting and such things, all to Microsofts specs for Internet connected PCs.
But when it turned out that nobody could edit one page or upload a picture, and the webdesign company couldn't redesing there system we turned Acrive-X and Scripting on again.
We'll hopefully have something better next year!
copake_ham said:Okay - went onto the computer that uses XP (other uses ME) and connected to Socke's link.
Interesting.
Not sure of his "point". Is this a roller derby thing? 😕
A Nikon spokesman said its decision had been made because sales of analogue cameras have fallen catastrophically. In the most recent fiscal year, ended March 2005, film camera bodies accounted for only 3 per cent of its $1.5 billion sales - down from 19 per cent on the previous year. Sales of Nikon digital cameras have soared to 75 per cent - as compared with 47 per cent three years earlier.
So, for the average punter, film lost the argument with digital ages ago. That explains why Kodak decided to stop making film cameras last year. But Nikon catered to a different market: people who were fastidious about quality and often technically knowledgeable. By abandoning film, Nikon is really signalling the advent of a radical shift in the technology that will satisfy even these picky folks.
In its statement, the company said that despite growing competition, Nikon has continued to outperform the market, with recent positive financial results. The company’s net profit rose by 20 percent in the first fiscal half-year, which ended in September, and its sales increased by 9.8 percent to ¥342.85 billion ($3 billion) in the same period.
RJBender said:
The key to it is better image sensing: in 10 years' time, cameras will produce huge, razor-sharp images with exquisite detail and good colour rendition.
Socke said:If he'd written that two years ago, I might have believed that. My three year old D60 produces files with good colour rendition and detail one can expect at that resolution and, depending on the lens, very sharp but not huge.
The pictures I get at the moment from Canon 1DMkIIs and Nikon D2Xs are better than everything I've seen from scanned slide film, the PJs shoot at ISO400 and 800 with results no slide film can match under this circumstances.
And I get the pictures right after the last race.
That is why PJs jumped on the digital bandwagon!
bmattock said:I disagree - with my *ist DS, I cannot tell much about the quality of one M42 lens versus another - mount the same lenses on my Bessaflex and scan the negs, and I can see 'good' versus 'bad' in terms of lens quality. I love my DSLR, but it simply cannot resolve to a level where I can see the difference, and film (for the moment) can.
Socke said:I see the differences between a Sigma 28-70/2.8-4 and a Canon 24-70L, maybe your lenses are just to good 🙂
In an 8x12 Frontier print from scanned slides out of my Contax G and 45/2 or files from my Canon D60 with 35/2 I see no big difference and 90% of my prints are 5x7!
I have only one problem with the Canon, it is not a rangefinder!
dkirchge said:I'm slowly coming to agree with Bill. Going a bit OT here, but hey, we've alrady been all over the map with this thread, so why not?
I went to an orchid show yesterday and took my digital camera (Olympus C-707WZ, 7MP) instead of the film camera I wanted to. Mostly I just thought of playing with framing options and trying shots I might want to go back and replicate later with film. The light was dodgy both indoors and out, tough shooting conditions.
The results? Good enough for 8x10s, including significant cropping on several shots, and that's my normal quality measure. I could even get 11x14 out of most of the uncropped shots with no sweat if I had a printer that big. I'm most impressed with the way the camera sticks to the lowest ISO possible before it bumps up (I left it in auto ISO and JPEG mode just to test it). In fact, it hung on to ISO 80 when I normally would have bit the bullet and shifted up. Colors were vibrant without being unnatural and the default sharpness is even a touch on the soft side, very easy to adjust. I can't wait to try RAW mode and see what I can produce.
Am I done with film? Not yet, especially not for black-and-white, but I think I may be done with color film once I burn up my existing stock.