Canon introduces new cameras and lenses in advance of CP+ trade show #Canon #Cameras

Cameras

Canon EOS 77D Digital SLR Camera Body – Black – $899.99

Canon EOS 77D Digital SLR Camera Body Kit, with EF-S 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 IS STM Lens – $1,049.00

Canon EOS 77D DSLR Camera Kit, with EF-S 18-135mm F3.5-5.6 IS STM Lens- $1,499.00

Canon EOS Rebel T7i DSLR Camera Body – $749.00

Canon EOS Rebel T7i DSLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM Lens – $899.00

Canon EOS Rebel T7i DSLR Camera with EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS STM Lens – $1,299.00
Canon EOS M6 Mirrorless Digital Camera Body – $779.00

Black and Silver versions

 

Canon EOS M6 Mirrorless Digital Camera Kit with EF-M 15-45mm f/3.5-6.3 IS STM Lens – $899.00

Black and Silver versions

 

Canon EOS M6 Mirrorless Digital Camera Black Kit with EF-M 18-150mm f/3.5-6.3 IS STM – $1,279.00

Black and Silver versions

 

LENS
CANON EF-S 18-55 F/3.5-5.6 IS STM LENS – $249.00

 

ACCESSORIES
Canon BR-E1 Wireless Remote for T7i and 77D – $49.95
Canon EVC-DC2 Electronic Viewfinder Black – for EOS M6 / EOS M3 / PowerShot G1 X Mark II / PowerShot G3 X – $209.95

Black and Silver

#3D TV is dead in Australia, but smartphone-based #VR3D #VR viewers may replace TVs

As I’ve said before, smart phones provide an inexpensive entry point for virtual reality viewing:

A key benefit is that it does not require you to buy a new TV. Instead, you can use a smartphone, which 84% of Australians already have.

Source: 3D television is dead… so what next?

Consumer 3D TV died for multiple reasons

  1. Little to no content available (huge reason)
  2. Expense of purchasing a new TV just after many had upgraded to HDTV.
  3. The global economic collapse in 2009 onwards.
  4. And as the article notes, many parts of the world were just converting to digital television transmission, adding another hurdle for consumers.

Basically, timing and lack of content ended the consumer 3D TV market – and had nothing to do with having to wear glasses to view 3D, contrary to widespread news reporters assertions that 3D died because of “3D goggles” (the same reporters now gush over VR “helmets”).

While 3D TV has mostly disappeared for now, a lot of people are viewing 3D using VR 3D “Google Cardboard” viewers with their smart phones. There are Youtube videos targeting this audience that have been watched hundreds of thousands of times.

Evidence that VR 3D viewing of Youtube 3D videos is real #VR #VR3D #VR360

Not long ago, I began posting my own 3D video content to a new Youtube channel at https://www.youtube.com/user/Coldstreams3D (also known as “VR 3D SBS Coldstreams3D”)

As a brand new channel, I get few views! Most views come through Youtube searches for content.

However, of the views  I do get, 65% of the viewing time is coming from mobile phones, 20% from computers and 11% from 3D TVs and the rest from tablets, game consoles and “unknown” devices.

This is consistent with most people viewing the 3D content with VR cardboard-style viewers.

Guide to 3D and Drones

Coldstreams 3D and Drones