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With the popularity of the 3 axis gimbaled rigs (Ronin, Movi, Came-TV etc) on non-stabilized cameras such as the a7s do they continue to be of benefit to the new 5 axis stabilized Sony cameras? For a rig, should one look at the non-stabilized versions or fork out the coins for the gimbaled rig? Reviewing videos online where 'testing' stabilization, they typically are testing/reviewing for photo application rather than video application, so doesn't address the question. I am just about to pull the trigger on a Came-7800 or Ronin-m (they are never cross compared on video either as the 7800 is vs the full size Ronin despite the closer match with the m model.) Just wondering if ought to save my money. Primary use will be real estate walkthrough with b-roll on slider and jib.

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    • Hola, parece que estan agotados, saludos Felipe 
    • I'd suggest you start by running a simple test.  Take pictures of a typical scene/subject and each of the JPEG settings your camera offers.  Then compare them in the output that you normally produce.  You may or may not see a difference.  I normally shoot at the highest JPEG level and save that file -- but make a smaller file (lower resolution) for normal/typical use. There's plenty of editing that you can do with JPEGs on your computer -- depending on your software -- and there are features in your camera that can help out, as well.  That depends on your camera.  Put them together, and it might meet your needs.  For example, your camera probably has several bracketing features that will take the same shot with different settings with one press of the button.  Then you can select the best JPEG to work with on your computer.  I frequently use this feature to control contrast.
    • If you set up some basic presets in your processing software and use batch processing, you don't need jpeg at all. I shoot RAW only, use (free) Faststone Image Viewer which will view any type of image file to cull my shots, and batch process in Darktable. I can start with 2000-3000 shots and in a matter of a few hours have them culled, processed, and posted. A handful of shots, say a couple hundred from a photo walk, are done in minutes.  This saves card space, computer space, and upload time.  The results are very good for posting online. When someone wants to buy one or I decide to print it, I can then return to the RAW file and process it individually for optimum results.  I never delete a RAW file. Sometimes I'll return to an old shot I processed several years ago and reprocess it. I have been very surprised how much better they look as my processing skills improved.  
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