Transfer photos from camera to easyhdr4/30/2023 ![]() Instead of saying Who cares what the WB is, JPEG can force you to take an extra few minutes to get the white balance and exposure right in camera. JPEG can force you to become a better photographer.It is obviously easier to achieve a finished product, but maybe you like the "look" and don't want to use the camera manufacturers software to replicate the same look as it is another additional step. Some people like the in-camera processing that converts to JPEG.If you are shooting in a studio and can accurately control all aspects of the image(specifically light), you may benefit very little from RAW and it might just end up costing you money.The extra storage considerations become a significant concern with RAW.Maximum frames per second and the amount of images that can be captured before the camera buffer slows down max fps can be faster with JPEG over RAW.RAW significantly slows down many workflows especially for high volume photographers(sports, portrait, etc.).This benefits not only memory card capacity but also editing workflow speed, archival storage requirements, and speed to download images. For example a RAW file from a Nikon D800 can be 50MB and the JPEG may be a fraction at 10MB. JPEGs are compressed and typically have much smaller file sizes.what devices you support, etc - you'd need management panels, also the ability for the camera to on the fly save to the USB instead of internal SD/CFE.Beyond the very obvious memory card requirement differences between RAW and JPEG images as noted in the question: I'm sure they could do it but it would be fairly extensive firmware to add in this. Yeah pretty much they would have to support USB OTG. There is absolutely no difference and, in fact, I ran this question up to Canon last night and am hoping for an answer. it doesn't just magically happen - device drivers have to support it so the OS knows what to do. I doubt Canon has put that in DryOS - i haven't even seen it on their cini cameras. It works on a cell phone because andriod / ios support OTG devices. It may already work and is being overlooked. This would work in a camera which has that, much the same as it does in a cell phone. I suspect if it were not difficult it would have been done already. Maybe it hasn't been overlooked, it could be that there are complexities in dealing with external devices that would bog down the firmware. Perhaps they could, but to date it has not been done. I think that's what I said I simply noted that there is no such functionality currently in any Canon ILC cameras (well, or any Canon digital camera for that matter). ![]() There is no such functionality with the firmware in ILCs. If the device has no rudimentary OS, such as the WD Wireless Pro, then the host device must have it. I have this 8TB Sabrent Rocket just praying to be used as such. There is no reason whatsoever that an external SSD cannot be implemented and used in the R5, just like it can be in a smart phone, or on a PC, or laptop, or any of millions of other places. It is not entirely true that the storage device would have to have a file management system.
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