If the goal is pano creation with no parallax, then the more shifting of the back, the better. Where the XT design really falls off is on the longer glass, like the Rodenstock 90mm which can make 25mm of shift (HR-SW), or the Schneider 60mm, or the Rodenstock 70mm and 50mm, both of which will easily shift past 12mm. I have the 32mm and know it can make easily and at time 20mm. I have seen article after article stating that the max shift of the 32mm Rodenstock by design is 12mm, and the 40mm since it's not available doesn't count. What has fascinated me is the way the various users justify the design, and gloss past the glaring oversights, 12mm of shift in one direction and no tilt. I guess there is no leaf shutter option on the FPS? So flash sync advantage for faster shutter speeds would go to the XT. Good point on the Alpa FPS, I did over look it and as you point out a great solution, as one system/shutter works on multiple lenses. But having a IBIS type solution on a Phase One back would be a nice feature. Phase has made no effort to move existing Arca, Cambo, or Alpa customer to the XT via a trade in so for now they must be happy with their sales.īack to Pixel shift on the IQ?, I can't begin to imagine the cost. Even the cost of switching an existing lens from copal to X shutter is way to high at 4K (last time I checked). However the cost of entry to the XT me is to high. I guess I can understand that, as it's the only type of solution on the market, as no other tech company was able to figure out a way to get a modern shutter on a tech lens. Phase seems to be mainly focused on the XT platform. We are still waiting for a Capture Pilot solution for the IQ4. What has not impressed me with Phase One for the past 1 1/2 years is the slow rate of updates to the IQ4. I had wondered if Phase One would come out with a mirrorless camera, for the IQ4, but the IQ4 has now reached over 2 years in life and it's still not working 100%, and there are still features that seem to only work on the XT. But I would also assume a totally new design? The current one I don't think could handle a IBIS type of mechanism. All of Koala Man’s eight episodes are out now on Hulu, so give it a shot if you just can’t get enough of Cusack’s Australian goodness.Pixel shift for a Phase back, would be an interesting proposition for sure. Cusack reunites audiences with the characters Damo and Darren from his breakout YouTube short “Ciggy Butt Brain.” On the voice actor side, Hugh Jackman and Jemaine Clement are both series regulars, and guest stars include Alexandra Daddario, Miranda Otto, Justin Roiland, and Hugo Weaving. Koala Man also features some fun appearances from characters and actors alike. Related: Adult Swim's Smiling Friends: What We Hope to See in Season 2 By the end of the first episode, Koala Man introduces a giant, talking alien flower monster that eats garbage, and it only gets stranger from there. What starts as a man doing minor tasks around town - rescuing a cat from a tree and helping an elderly woman with her Blu-ray player, for instance - quickly devolves into bizarre, otherworldly antics. The series follows Kevin, a middle-aged Australian man who protects his city of Dapto, New South Wales as the masked vigilante Koala Man. Cusack’s latest creation, Hulu’s Koala Man is a show about Australia (go figure), but this time it’s a little mellower than the absurdity of Smiling Friends.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |