From the NY Post article - The photographer who took a โone in a millionโ picture of a bullet whizzing by Donald Trumpโs head was using a camera that shoots 30 frames per second when gunfire broke out at the ex-presidentโs Pennsylvania rally.
New York Times photojournalist Doug Mills said Monday he didnโt realize he captured the historic photo during the attempted assassination of Trump until after an editor spotted the apparent path of a bullet that was fired by sniper Thomas Matthew Crooks from a nearby roof Saturday evening.
Well - that is what video is, really. Most cameras these days shoot 30fps by default. So shooting video is the pretty much the same as shooting 30fps stills. The only real difference is that you can have higher res images.
Um, no.
From the NY Post article - The photographer who took a โone in a millionโ picture of a bullet whizzing by Donald Trumpโs head was using a camera that shoots 30 frames per second when gunfire broke out at the ex-presidentโs Pennsylvania rally.
New York Times photojournalist Doug Mills said Monday he didnโt realize he captured the historic photo during the attempted assassination of Trump until after an editor spotted the apparent path of a bullet that was fired by sniper Thomas Matthew Crooks from a nearby roof Saturday evening.
Link to the article: https://nypost.com/2024/07/16/us-news/ny-times-photojournalist-doug-mills-recalls-capturing-1-in-a-million-image-of-bullet-whizzing-by-trump-at-pa-rally/
I stand corrected. Thank you.
Well - that is what video is, really. Most cameras these days shoot 30fps by default. So shooting video is the pretty much the same as shooting 30fps stills. The only real difference is that you can have higher res images.