Canon EOS
Hardware
EOS 350D
- CMOS
- 22,2 x 14,8 mm
- 8,2 millions of pixels (8 millions when capturing -> 3456 x 2304)
- ISO 100, 200, 400, 800 or 1600
- EF-S body compatible with all Canon EF (red dot/full frame) or EF-S (white square) but 1,6X to get 35 mm equivalent
- Links
EOS 5D Mark II
Accessories
Links
- sur Canon Japan (+samples)
- manuels
- Software Digital Photo Professional 1.6.1
- Firmwares etc
- CANON iMAGE GATEWAY
- Digital SLR cameras
- Astrophotography guide for EOS DIGITAL
Hacks
Misc
- QUICKAPN: Raquette de commande d’APN et ici
- Hand-made trigger:
File:Declencheur.jpg
The external trigger is composed of a jack 2.5mm, three wires, an on/off switch and a push button
Shortcut of ground and right (the middle ring) is equivalent to half-press, here wired to a simple on/off switch which provides the housing
Shortcut of ground and left (the tip) is equivalent to full press, here wired to a simple red push button
IR photography
- Wikipedia intro
- IR-CUT FILTER REMOVAL OPERATION for 350D
- Tutoriel modification du 350d
- Remplacement du filtre du Canon EOS 350D
Linux
- Digital Camera Support for UNIX, Linux and BSD
- Canon PTP extensions
- Don't seem to work yet for 350D
- Dave Coffin RAW Digital Photo Decoder
- Digital photography and Linux moved to http://dplinux.org
- Java Panorama Viewer (PTviewer)
- gphoto2 (2.1.6 in unstable)
- gphoto2 --config allows to change e.g. the owner string
- add users to group camera
- see /usr/share/doc/libgphoto2-2/linux-hotplug scripts
- apparently capture could work with gphoto2 according to this page: Needs to build TRUNK with experimental features on
- gphotofs and fuse
Digital photography
- Steve's DigiCams
- Digital Camera Reviews and News (same as here?)
- Imaging resource incl. some howtos, tutorials,... Some EOS300 specific ones
- Digital camera resource page
- Digital Photography Hacks incl. free sample chapters
Scripts
If you don't like having files named IMG_1234.JPG, you can try sth like this to rename the images _yyyy_mm_dd-xxx.jpg_
j=1; for i in *.JPG;do exif.py $i 2>/dev/null |\ gawk -v i=$i -v j=$j ' /DateTime:/{ match($0,/([0-9]+):([0-9]+):([0-9]+)/,a); system("mv "i" " sprintf(a[1] "_" a[2] "_" a[3] "-" "%03d" ".jpg",j)) }'; j=$((j+1)); done
Devel
- Capture
- USB Snoopy
Notes
I was wondering why in bulk mode over 30s the camera was busy after the shot for about the same time.
Now I got the answer!
When taking long exposure shots, we can have what's called hot pixels, red, green or blue. To remove them automatically the SLR takes a picture of the same duration with the shutter closed (called "dark" in astrophoto) and substract it from the previous. [1]