![]() You may be surprised with how much information in included in every EXIF file. ![]() It can also sync a camera clock to your PCs clock. If you haven’t seen this before it is worth a look. EOSCount allows you to read a shutter counter from a Canon EOS DSLR (DIGIC III and later) camera. This site, however, also provides all the information in the EXIF file including what lens was used, the f-stop, the lens mount, location, time and date, and lots more. But the vast majority of the 39,489 shots was, I am sure, slides.Īnother site you can use is which yields the exact same shutter count. So it has photographed thousands of slides, probably less than the shutter count because I have used the camera in other ways. ![]() But this camera shoots slides in a proprietary unit called SnapSlide. I was surprised to see that this camera Sony A5100 had such a shutter count. This photo DSC00701.JPG had this information in its EXIF file. It shows that one of my cameras has made 39,489 exposures. The first isĭrag the image, for instance a jpg, and you can see right away your shutter count. Windows is EOSInfo, simply connect the camera to your computer using a cable and run the program. There is a freeware program that will pull up the count. Take a jpg file or a raw image file from your camera before you’ve done any editing to one of these websites. It is just buried deeper in the exif and most readers dont show that much detail.
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