![]() quite a tele (300mm equivalent to full frame)Ĭolor Profile: Camera Calibration section in LrĪdding a Color Profile after shooting with RAW is still possible via Lightroom in Develop mode, Camera Calibration section on the right hand side:Īlternatively you can use the Fujifilm RAW Studio which does the job with the camera processor.almost a default lens (42mm equivalent to full frame).not so fast regarding aperture, but sharp and for the sunshine.looking forward to portrait work (87mm equivalent to full frame).Please note that the first sample picture has one of the famous settings by Fujifilm applied, Classic Chrome. I have three Minolta lenses, which all fit perfectly on the adapter. Benefit of using the Minolta lenses: as the adapters make the lenses only manually usable the Canon lenses without manual aperture ring would not work in a practical way (change setting on Canon camera, move it to Fujifilm camera) and also the benefit of the lightweight system would be absurdly dispensed with. I opted for the Minolta MD/MC to Fujifilm X mount adapter to use my available lenses. However, the idea is quite a good one and a short web search brought me to K&F Concept who offer a vast amount of different adapters to camera systems. As I am currently not in possession of a M mount lens this might be a bit impractical. ![]() To make the brightness buttons work, add this to /etc/init.d/rc.local: setpci -v -H1 -s 00:01.Fujifilm offers a Leica M mount adapter for the X-Mount cameras including the X-T2. You may also need to run sudo dpkg-reconfigure nvidia-current after rebooting. (optional) If you don’t see the nvidia logo or get a blank screen, try installing gfxCardStatus (version 2.2.1, not 2.3), and forcing the discrete graphics card from the dropdown menu of their toolbar icon.Reboot and you should see the nvidia logo during boot.edit /etc/default/grub and add i915.lvds_channel_mode=2 i915.modeset=0 i915.lvds_use_ssc=0 to GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT inside the double-quotes between the words “quiet splash”.edit /etc/X11/nf and add to the Device section: Option "UseDPLib" "off".sudo apt-get install linux-headers-$(uname -r).Now you’ll need to install the proprietary NVIDIA drivers, and configure Xorg: Note: After changing to EFI, you may get a blank screen for several seconds during boot-up. (optional) if you want to remove some of the extra rEFIt options, just delete the directories you don’t want from /boot/efi/EFI (be VERY CAREFUL here, and don’t delete the APPLE directory).You’ll probably have several new options in rEFIt, select any of them to boot up Make sure that “Separate /boot/efi partition” is checked, then click the “Apply” button, and follow the directions (you’ll be asked to remove and reinstall GRUB).Click on “Advanced options”, go to the “GRUB location” tab.sudo apt-get install -y boot-repair & boot-repair.sudo add-apt-repository ppa:yannubuntu/boot-repair.Follow these steps adapted from the Ubuntu UEFI page (note: as of this writing the PPA is missing the packages for trusty, so you’ll need to use the saucy packages instead): To get the 2880x1800 native resolution, and the external display ports working you’ll need to convert GRUB to EFI mode. Sudo apt-get update & sudo apt-get install bcmwl-kernel-source Wifi doesn’t work out of the box, so from another computer (or your OSX install) download the driver and its dependencies (dkms, libc6-dev, linux-libc-dev), then copy them all to a flash drive and boot back into Ubuntu. Just press spacebar and it should reboot. Also, at the end of the installer, after the dialog asking you to restart, you’ll probably get a black screen. Note that the wifi won’t work (we’ll fix this in the next step), so don’t try to install updates during the installation process, unless you have a separate usb wifi dongle or ethernet. Make sure you download the 14.04 ISO though, for step 3. Just follow steps 1 through 3 in my first guide, to get rEFIt installed and prepare to install Ubuntu. Better nvidia support (no more need to set kernel options).It seems quite stable so far, and is mostly the same as 13.10 and 13.04. However, I did a fresh install of 14.04 on my macbook pro (rMBP). I did an upgrade install of 13.10, so I skipped writing a blog post about it.
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