We Review the New MacBook Pro With M5 Pro: Apple Delivers Another Remarkable Leap
The M5 MacBook Pro represents a fundamental shift in how Apple builds its pro-level chips, and the results are nothing short of impressive. I've been putting it through its paces over the past few days, and here are my thoughts.
I've been testing the 16-inch model equipped with the M5 Pro (18-core CPU, 20-core GPU, 64 GB RAM, 4 TB SSD, Nano-Texture Display, Space Black), pushing it through creative, computational, and everyday workflows to see how it stacks up against its predecessor, the M4 MacBook Pro. Here's what I found.
The Emotional Inventory of a Film Fridge: Why We’re All Hoarding Stock We’re Afraid To Shoot
I know exactly where this starts: standing in front of the fridge, door open, chilly air spilling out, pretending I’m just “checking what I have” when I already know every box and canister by heart.
On the outside, it’s just a normal family fridge: milk, leftovers, a suspicious jar of pickles. But crack open the deli drawer and you hit the real nerve center of my photography: a chaotic, overstuffed archive of hope, anxiety, nostalgia, and way too many “special occasion” rolls that never seem to meet a special-enough occasion.
The Camera Is a Shield: Why True Creativity Requires Uncomfortable Solitude
HEIF vs. JPEG: Should You Switch Your Camera's Default File Format?
Somewhere in your camera's menu system, buried three levels deep in a file settings submenu you've probably never explored, there's an option to change your default image format from JPEG to HEIF. It's been there for a while now. Canon, Sony, and Nikon have all added it to their mirrorless bodies over the past few years. And almost nobody uses it.
The Thing Most Photographers Skip That Completely Changes Their Work
Most photographs never leave a screen. We printed the same image three different ways and discovered how much presentation changes not just the photo, but the way you shoot.
Usually, photos get edited, posted, maybe shared, and then they live their entire life as a glowing rectangle in someone’s hand. That workflow has become so normal that many photographers never stop to question it. But while screens are convenient, they are not the full experience of a photograph.
The Honor Robot Phone Brings ARRI's Cinema Expertise to Your Pocket
Why Adobe Needs to Make a Creative Cloud Neo for Apple's New MacBook Neo
In what is a hot take only if you're an Adobe shareholder, the MacBook Neo is the biggest sign yet that Adobe's subscription model needs some major rethinking.
It's 2026, and tariffs, war and inflation, amongst other things, have been hitting American wallet pretty hard. Apple was able to read the room and responded with the $599 MacBook Neo ($499 if you're a student or educator). There are other reasons the thing exists, of course. Apple wanted to lure people using cheap Windows computers with their iPhones. They wanted to corner the education market.
Why APS-C Cameras and Lenses Are Having Their Best Year Ever
Here is a number that should end a decade's worth of arguments: in 2025, CIPA member companies (which include Canon, Nikon, Sony, Fujifilm, Panasonic, and OM Digital Solutions) shipped over 4.45 million interchangeable-lens bodies with sensors smaller than 35mm. Full frame and larger? Roughly 2.54 million. The format category that photography forums have spent years dismissing as the "starter sensor you graduate from" outsold full frame by a ratio of roughly 1.75 to one.
Choosing the Right Focal Length on Location
Why Anamorphic Lenses Feel More “Cinematic”
Flashback ONE35 V2: Bringing the Disposable Film Camera Experience Into the Digital Age
The MacBook Neo Is Not for You (and That's the Point)
Every time Apple releases a new product, the internet runs the same play: benchmark it against the most expensive thing in the lineup, declare it insufficient, and move on. The MacBook Neo is getting that treatment right now. The internet is wrong.
It only has 8 GB of memory. The display is sRGB, not P3. There is no keyboard backlighting. The trackpad physically clicks instead of using Force Touch. It runs on an iPhone chip. You cannot even get Touch ID unless you pay $100 more for the 512 GB model.
Hummingbird Photography: Lessons Learned From 10 Years Behind the Lens
12 Micro Four Thirds Lenses That Justify the System in 2026
Every year, someone declares Micro Four Thirds dead. And every year, the system answers with glass that simply does not exist anywhere else. OM System just dropped the M.Zuiko 50-200mm f/2.8 IS PRO, the world's only constant f/2.8 zoom covering 100-400mm equivalent, and it is the kind of lens that makes full frame shooters do math they do not enjoy. But that flagship is not the whole story. Micro Four Thirds offers a lens catalog that rewards curiosity and punishes assumptions.






