CFexpress

Latest

  • SanDisk 1TB MicroSD card

    SanDisk memory cards are discounted for today only on Amazon

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    09.29.2021

    Amazon is selling SanDisk's 1TB Ultra MicroSDXC UHS-1 cards with adapter at just $110 for today only.

  • Canon

    Canon's EOS 1D X Mark III will be a technological tour de force

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    10.24.2019

    Canon has announced the development of its next flagship professional DSLR, the EOS-1D X Mark III, the most technologically advanced camera it has ever created. It will hit shooting speeds of up to 16fps with autofocus through the optical viewfinder (mechanical shutter), and 20fps in live view mode (mechanical or electronic shutter). Autofocus will be more accurate than ever thanks to a new AF sensor with 28 times the resolution in the center of the frame when you use the optical viewfinder. In live view mode, you'll have 525 phase detect AF pixels powered by Canon's Dual Pixel system. Autofocus will also be more stable and track subjects better thanks to new algorithms and AI technology.

  • Sony

    Sony's CFexpress cards will bring blistering speeds to cameras

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    02.28.2019

    Cameras are getting so fast now that it's hard for regular SD storage cards, even fancy UHS II models, to keep up. Sony has just announced that it's developing new cards using the all-new CFexpress tech that are up to the challenge. They can read and write data at speeds of 1,700 and 1,480 MB/s, respectively, blowing past every current type of camera storage. Several new cameras on the market, including Nikon's Z6/Z7 and the Panasonic S1/S1R, will support the cards.

  • Steve Dent/Engadget

    Nikon Z6 and Z7 updates help portrait shooters and videographers

    by 
    Steve Dent
    Steve Dent
    01.09.2019

    Nikon's new Z-Mount Z6 and Z7 cameras are getting some key new features they lacked at launch via an upcoming firmware update, the company announced. The biggest one is eye-detect autofocus that will lock onto a subject's eyes, rather than just their entire face. That will ensure that your subject's eyes are in focus rather than their nose, which can be a big problem on full-frame cameras with fast, shallow depth-of-field prime lenses. Nikon showed just how it will work in the short video below.