![]() ![]() ![]() Poof, first week as a Canon owner again and Disappointment ensues Just when I thought Canon didn't suck anymore and switched back. If its not in the software you can't extract it, period. This is a waste of time, at least for the RP, Canon just doesn't track the data in the camera. I checked the EXIF data on a photo which I took and do not see the shutter count in the data. I am curious as to how old the camera is. I have a Sony RX10 which I recently purchased used from MPB. , Pentax, and Sony include the shutter count. This Mac-based tool lists the EOS RP, with the caveat that Canon stores the count only in 1000 increments, not down to an actual count: Before paying for any software tool, carefully review the list of supported cameras. ![]() Possibly, to obtain the EOS RP, you can only do this via software that operates on specific MAC OS versions. Tools now divide over Mac (Apple) and Windows. In fact, with each DIGIC processor generation, Canon changes how / where the camera's shutter count is maintained within the camera, many times invalidating existing software that can access this data. Canon has not done this since DSLRs of the early 2000s. Nikon, Pentax, and Sony include the shutter count information in the EXIF data of the photos shot using their cameras. ![]()
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