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Canon U.S.A. Announces the 2013 Lineup of the Canon Live Learning Educational Events for Imaging Professionals and Enthusiasts MELVILLE, N.Y.--(BUSINESS WIRE)-- Canon U.S.A., Inc., a leader in ...
www.canon-europe.com /support /camera_software /#EOSDPP Screenshot of Canon DPP version 4.4.0 on Windows . Digital Photo Professional ( DPP ) is the software that Canon ships with its digital SLR (and some of its compacts, e.g. the Canon PowerShot S90 ) cameras for editing and asset management of its Canon raw (.CR2) files.
Eric Curry (born 1956) is an American photographer based in Los Angeles specializing in stock and industrial photography. [1] [2] A graduate of the Art Center College of Design, [3] Curry's photographs have appeared on the cover of Air & Space magazine and have been showcased in the University of California Riverside's California Museum of Photography and the Ordover Gallery at the San Diego ...
Canon U.S.A. to Showcase 'What It Takes to Image' at PhotoPlus Expo 2012 Company to Exhibit the Latest EOS Digital SLR and PowerShot Cameras, imagePROGRAF Large-Format Printers, and PIXMA PRO ...
Canon Inc. (Japanese: キヤノン株式会社; [note 1] Hepburn: Kyanon kabushiki gaisha) is a Japanese multinational corporation headquartered in Ōta, Tokyo, specializing in optical, imaging, and industrial products, such as lenses, cameras, medical equipment, scanners, printers, and semiconductor manufacturing equipment.
Vincent Laforet (born 1975, Switzerland) is a French-American director and photographer. Laforet shared the 2002 Pulitzer Prize for Feature Photography with four other photographers (Stephen Crowley, Chang Lee, James Hill, Ruth Fremson) as a member of The New York Times staff's coverage of the post 9/11 events overseas that captured "the pain and the perseverance of people enduring protracted ...
Magic Lantern is a firmware add-on for various Canon digital single-lens reflex (DSLR) cameras and the EOS M. [2] It adds features for DSLR filmmaking and still photography, and is free and open-source. Magic Lantern was originally written for the Canon EOS 5D Mark II [3] by Trammell Hudson in 2009 after he reverse engineered its firmware. [1]
Canon entered the computer industry in the 1970s, [1] starting with the AX-1 in October 1978. It sported the form factor of a desktop calculator and was fully programmable. [2] [3] This was followed up with the AS-100 in 1982, which was a more-traditional albeit heavier personal computer that ran a Intel 8088 and ran MS-DOS.