One thing to keep in mind as you (hopefully) get more into this, since you're not looking to do low-light photography, I would suggest cheeping out on the body, and emphasizing moreso for the glass. The lens you use matters a whole lot more than the body itself. That being said, make sure you like the features/look of the photos taken by more expensive bodies as well. It'll make upgrading a whole lot cheaper since you'll only need to upgrade the body instead of everything when you realize another brand has the look you want
(I started out on a Nikon D3200 in hs, then realized after college I liked Sony's mirrorless lineup a lot. I'm currently in the process of replacing the lenses I had originally gotten for the D3200, in addition to the camera body itself)
I agree, I was super excited about the probalistic opportunity for AI to help us unlock portions of meteorology that are still unknown to us, such as tornadogenesis and long range weather forecasting. The funny thing is there is definite opportunity to improve most weather apps, since % chance of rain doesn't tell the person anything about precipitation on a given day. What type of precipitation? How long? Will it be intense and short, or light but long-lasting? This one such bridge could vastly improve how people are able to understand a typically truncated weather forecast, but it still needs intent, which this implementation lacks
I'm very curious to see if they've learned their lesson from 2042, or just trust that it'll sell with reputation alone. The development cycle doesn't give me too much hope unfortunately
Does this work with multiple device accounts? Work requires my phone to have a personal/work account to be able to access applications like teams, and it's the only thing keeping me from swapping
One thing to keep in mind as you (hopefully) get more into this, since you're not looking to do low-light photography, I would suggest cheeping out on the body, and emphasizing moreso for the glass. The lens you use matters a whole lot more than the body itself. That being said, make sure you like the features/look of the photos taken by more expensive bodies as well. It'll make upgrading a whole lot cheaper since you'll only need to upgrade the body instead of everything when you realize another brand has the look you want
(I started out on a Nikon D3200 in hs, then realized after college I liked Sony's mirrorless lineup a lot. I'm currently in the process of replacing the lenses I had originally gotten for the D3200, in addition to the camera body itself)