![]() ![]() Lots of reviews should be read and tests performed in selecting your camera. Note, there are tricks employed by manufacturers to give higher frame rates. Sony A77, which shoots 1080 at 60fps for super smooth slow motion Nikon 1, which shoots 640 x 240 at 400fps Panasonic Lumix FZ200, which can shoot HD (720p) videos at 120fps and VGA-level (640 x 480) movies at 240fps Finding a camera – Most consumer cameras with high frame rates or fps drop off in resolution as the frame rate climbs. dealing with a requirement for serious amounts of light.ġ. finding an affordable camera with the right specificationsĢ. So, what about that budget – There are going to be two problems.ġ. These 160 fps videos are then played back at quarter speed. The guys who did this had access to a Red Epic which shoots HD up into hundreds of frames/second (This camera was used on Prometheus, Hobbit and the like)Įven they were limited (to 160fps) by a limit in the amount of light available. ![]() I watched this wonderful video yesterday and came to wonder how easy it would be to recreate without a huge budget. How to create a Slow Motion Wedding Photo Booth Written by Doug Young No comments Posted in Apple, Hints & Tips, How to, Mac, OSX, Software, Technology August 31, 2013 I haven’t yet settled on an option or options, but I will continue to consider them all as I hopefully work towards email nirvana. How to Turn Mac Mail Into a Fantastic Email ClientĪppstormTurning Mail.app Into the Best Mac Email App and have both provided inspiration to improve my lot while sticking with the default OSX mail app Switching to Mailpilot, dotmail, airmail or any alternative would make it more difficult to properly help these clients. As such it is important to be comfortable and conversant with their tool of choice. Apple Mail or Mail.app: I teach people how to manage software on their Macs and iOS devices. Your sent email contains unwanted ATT00001.htm attachments that prevent some email clients from viewing the complete text, You are used to alternate text and images inside your emails but your recipients can’t see them as intended, Your sent emails are hard to read because they are displayed with a small font by some email clientsĩ. Universal Mailer will be useful if any of these sound familiar to you: I like the messages style conversational view and the attachment view – arriving soon Persona: A people focussed email experience where you can manage your message threads with specific contacts quickly and easily. Airmail is clean and allows you to get to your emails without interruption – it’s the mail client for the 21st century.ħ. Cargolifter: One of the big selling points of Sparrow was the ability to send links rather than attachments.Ĭargolifter adds this feature to Apple’s Mail.appĪirmail was designed from the ground to retain the same experience with a single or multiple accounts and provide a quick, modern and easy-to-use user experience. I’m most interested because of the ability to attach as icons without polluting my outgoing message window with giant representations of the attached imagesĥ. I’ve never really considered inline attachments to be a problem, but clients have asked about them and how to avoid or, on Windows, receive them properly. It fixes the most annoying Apple Mail flaws, ensures compatibility with other email software, and allows you to set up how attachments are displayed and sent. Attachment Tamer: Attachment Tamer gives you control over attachment handling in Apple Mail. Think of it as a mini To-Do list, that ranks your emails by three different levels of importance.Ĥ. These three red squares allow you to set the importance of an email and filter out what is important and what isn’t. Sounds great, but I’m not sure much will come of it. If it does what it says on the tin it will easily be worth the price of admission ![]() This works on the premise that incoming email is incomplete and needs to be actioned Mail Pilot: an Innovative, To-do Style Approach to Your Emails (according to app storm)Ī very cool looking web based, subscription, non free email client. I have had a play with this and I am liking itĢ. Looks a bit low rent, but offers the ability to do powerful things like file or delete by sender and create reminders at the moment you send. On the other hand, I know I must revise my behaviour and develop better skills to handle my email and perhaps reach the mythical ‘Inbox Zero’īelow is not a review or recommendation, merely a series of links to interesting options I am hoping to learn more about.ġ. On one hand I love Mail on the Mac, but while I know it is a bottleneck and that I shouldn’t use it as a todo list – I do anyway. Recent questions from a client turned to email and caused me to investigate and re-evaluate my ongoing use of the default Mail.app on OSX ![]()
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