Fujifilm Releases Firmware Updates for Seven Fujinon Lenses
Fujifilm has released firmware updates for seven Fujinon lenses.
For all lenses, the only indication given by Fujifilm is “fix of minor bugs“.
You’ll find the full list below.
Fujifilm has released firmware updates for seven Fujinon lenses.
For all lenses, the only indication given by Fujifilm is “fix of minor bugs“.
You’ll find the full list below.
Fujifilm UK manger Andreas Georghiades returns to the Fujicast postcast.
It’s an almost 1 hour podcast, and if you are in a hurry and can’t listen it all, I provide a summary of everything the manager says, so you can get it all in under 5 minutes.
A little break from the gear talk we had, and the one that will come, by sharing images from our facebook groups.
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Fujifilm has released several new firmware updates.
Down below you find all details and download links.
If you you think at Italy, my home, you probably think at Rome, Florence and Venice.
And in fact, probably 70% of the tourists coming to Italy, visit those three cities and leave.
But there are many more beautiful spots to visit here in Italy, and one of them is definitely my hometown, the Dolomites.
After I unveiled my location a couple of days ago here, I got a significant numbers of emails from readers, asking me information about the Dolomites. I tried to reply to everybody as good as I can.
One recurring question was: do I recommend visiting the Dolomites also to people, who are not so fit and used to mountains.
My answer is a very clear “absolutely yes!“.
There are tons of cable ways, that bring you everywhere. For example, you can reach the highest peak of the Dolomites, the Marmolada, at 3,300m (10,800 feet) without walking a single step and enjoy views like this.
And if you are more on the adventurous side, of course there are tons of tracks and hikes of all kind of difficulties.
Old or young, single of family, fit or lazy, there is a lot ot enjoy for everyone.
Needless to say, also photographically speaking you are in paradise here, as the images below show.
So, if you ever plan a trip to Italy, try to put the Dolomites on your “to do” list.
I can’t wait these days of lockdown and isolation to be over and get a beer on the Dolomites again.
Today I decided to go through our Fujifilm X-T and GFX group and pick a couple of images that members shared of the Dolomites, in the hope this article inspires you for you next photographic journey.
Stay safe, let’s go through these challenging times together, and done that, enjoy life again as never before!
stay strong, healthy and happy
Patrick
FR-reader Lars contacted me and wrote:
Today I got my X-Pro3 back from Fuji Service with a new firmware update vers. 1.02. That update was actually released already on 16. January regarding the Fuji Website. But when you click on it you go to the vers. 1.01 that was released in December and the file is the same too.
I did check, and indeed, on the firmware list page, Fujifilm mentiones X-Pro3 firmware 1.02 as released on January 16. As you can see from the screenshot above, it says:
The phenomenon that in rare cases, a freeze could occur is fixed
But once you click and enter on the X-Pro3 firmware download page here, all you see is firmware 1.01.
My guess? Fujifilm will release another firmware update, maybe ver.1.1, which will incorporate the bug fixed with 1.02 as well as other issues.
Don’t forget to…
Oscar Wilde once said:
The only way to get rid of temptation is to yield to it
But today we will prove him wrong.
We will display a series of stunning X-T3, X-T2 and X-T20 images, and show to Oscar that we don’t need a Fujifilm X-T4 to create stunning imagery.
Because no specs on the world can replace your feeling… and it’s a known fact, that feeling is the origin of your creativity and intuition.
In the spirit of this post, do you want to hear the story behind my all time favorite image?
If you have 30 seconds… here it is:
I was in Cambodia (for my fair trade Fuji X T-shirts project), walking through an abandoned Casino in Bokor, with one of my very best friends.
I borrowed her my Fujifilm X-T1 camera, and she took a couple of snapshots.
At some point I saw some kids playing hide and seek in the building.
One of them hide behind a wall, waiting for his little friends to come up the stairs.
I noticed all this, and told to my friend “give me the X-T1, and I’ll grab the killer shot“.
She gave it to me, I placed myself in the right position… and waited.
And then it happened: the hiding kid leaned out beyond the wall, then suddenly watched down the stairs to see where his friends are. In that moment, I was ready and took the image.
I came home, printed it, and now I have it big on my wall.
And it was taken with a Fujifilm X-T1.
Call it luck, call it intuition. Whatever it was. It was nothing you can read on any specs paper.
So yes, let’s be happy about the Fujifilm X-T4, but also not forget, that what we own now, is plenty of good enough.
In the spirit of this post, enjoy the X-T image roundup below.
Here are the top 10 articles for December.
I hope you enjoyed reading FujiRumors in December, and I am working to give you an good January, too :).
Why not…
Fujifilm has just released several firmware updates, including firmware 3.10 for Fujifilm X-T3.
With the new firmware, Fujifilm also released the new features guide for Fujifilm X-T3. At the beginning it was available only in Japanese, but now you can get in English here as well as other languages.
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Sonder Creative and Anete compared the Fujifilm X-T3 with Fujinon XF 56mm f/1.2 with the Sony a7iii with Zeiss Batis 85mm f/1.8.
At the end it is a split decision, with Anete preferring the Fujifilm system and Sonder Creative the Sony system.
But I want to highlight one thing, before I leave you to the video and a summary down below.
We know that, in terms of depth of field, f/1.2 on APS-C does not give the same results of f/1.2 on full frame.
In fact, f/1.2 on APS-C is closer to f/1.8 on full frame, and this is why on this comparison you don’t really see any difference in terms of depth of field between the Fuji and the Sony (except for the bokeh quality, which is better on the Fuji.)
The point?
When Sonder Creative exposed properly both images (base ISO, and widest aperture), he noticed that the shutter speed was completely different:
He concludes saying that:
one of the advantages of shooting with APS-C, is that you can shoot with a much faster shutter speed compared to full frame
Seen from this perspective, the light gathering capability of f/1.2 on Fujifilm APS-C is and remains f/1.2.
I thought I point this out and let you discuss about it.
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And now to the video and the summary: