Were you hoping that Canon would make black teleconverters, to match its new black 70-200mm f/2.8? Sorry, you're out of luck ...
Canon introduces three new hybrid RF L series lenses designed for seamless photography and video. Available soon, these ...
Canon announced three new hybrid lenses in the RF70-200 F/2.8 L IS USM Z, RF24mm F/1.4 L VCM, and RF50mm F/1.4 L. The Canon RF-S7.8mm F/4 STM Dual Lens, a lens first teased during the Apple WWDC 2024 ...
Canon is set to expand its RF-mount lens line up with three new 'hybrid' lenses for its mirrorless cameras. In a teaser, the camera giant posted a picture (above) of its two existing hybrid lenses ...
This Wi-Fi Canon EOS Rebel T7 features a 24.1 MP CMOS sensor and a DIGIC ... If you want to get highly detailed close-ups, the Sigma 105mm f/2.8 EX DG OS HSM Macro Lens is the perfect choice. It's ...
Compatible with the Canon EOS R7 camera body, the high-speed autofocus and high-resolution image sensor, coupled with Canon’s renowned color science, effortlessly captures detailed VR content and ...
The Canon 5D Mark II will work with pretty much any EF-mount lens ever made, however it is not compatible with the special EF-S lenses designed for cameras with APS-C size sensors. Designed with a ...
Initially, the new lens is only compatible with the Canon APS-C camera EOS R7. It will be available in stores from November at a price of 550 euros.
[Dan K] had just such a lens from Sigma, but wanted to get it working fully with a camera using the Canon EF lens fitting. Hacking ensued. The lens in question was a Sigma 15-30mm f/3.5-4.5 EX DG ...
iPhone lenses. He loves photography and camera gear, and previously worked as an editor for Canon EMEA's editorial site. He has a wealth of experience testing and using photography gear of all types.
A computer system that is compatible with Intel's x86 CPU family. All operating systems and applications that run on Intel x86 systems (Core, Pentium, Xeon, etc.) run exactly the same on an x86 ...
A misguided reference to a PC. The term IBM compatible is more accurate, because IBM made the first PC. Even that has little meaning today, because Intel and Microsoft set the PC standards ...