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I guess 100 people will have 100 different ways of saving their media files, so it's just to find the procedure that is right for you. How I use it? With a special program that copy the image files, raw files and video files to separate folders, and during the copy operation it's adding all the media information for each file to a Json file that can be viewed in a treeview (see the image below).Īdding all the information from the files later would be a lot of work, but if it's done during the copying of the files (that you have to do anyway), it's there if you need it. Why I use it? Most of the time it's not interesting at all. But it's nice to have an overview of the session and very useful if you go back to look at the video clips or images later. Just the initial settings are saved in the file. Useful information like camera, lens, focal length, iso, white balance, duration of the clip, frame rate, shutter, aperture and a lot more.Īs in your example if you change the aperture, iso or white balance (or some other settings), it's not possible to record it. The details in the video files are all there, just like in jpg or raw files.
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