Chrome is one of the first things I disable on my Android devices, and I hate the idea of signing up for any accounts just to access local files.

But Canon welcomed me with a big surprise, and a fuck you, too!

  • @ohshit604@sh.itjust.works
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    276 days ago

    You’ll end up with better quality images this way compared to transferring them to Canon servers where they’ll likely be compressed or altered.

    • @JasonDJ@lemmy.zip
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      326 days ago

      Not to mention likely cataloged by geotag and used for “targeted marketing” by Canon and “select partners”.

      That shit is just creepy.

      • Drunk & Root
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        46 days ago

        it prob does this already on the camera wish someone figured out how to make open source camera os

        • @kassiopaea@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          46 days ago

          I remember having a PowerShot SX110IS back in 2010 and there was an open source firmware I loaded on it. I forget what it was called. It’s a damn shame that we can’t really do stuff like that anymore.

          • kamen
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            25 days ago

            Magic Lantern probably. Don’t know about compact cameras, but this thing was big with DSLRs 10-15 years ago. What’s pretty impressive to me is that it didn’t require flashing the firmware, it just booted from a memory card.

    • @BURN@lemmy.world
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      24 days ago

      They’re not being transmitted to canon before downloading. The camera starts a (slow) local WiFi network that the phone can connect to and it directly transfers that way. This means you still get full quality RAW files