Just have an issue with Sky Go at the minute, trying to download a programme onto my iPhone so we can watch elsewhere but the option to download to phone is not there. Any ideas? Is it only certain programmes or films? I have a Dowload To Phone tab on app but the specific programme is not there?!
Thanks
I see what you are trying to do now, you are trying to download this from your Sky Q box. As this is a BBC program then it isn't possible to do this I'm afraid as the BBC themselves will not allow it, so if you want to watch it on your iphones you will need to watch it via the BBC iPlayer app.
I would appreciate if you can help on any tutorial on learning how go do this with the Canon Picture Profile Editor since I think there is no way to to export a Lightroom preset to a Canon Picture Style file?
Are there any other options that you know of? Some sort of advanced tutorial on how to emulate film will really like to have the look of the likes of Kodak (Ektar, Portra, Gold), Fuji and many more film stocks.
I don't think you can get there in-camera using Canon's picture styles. I shoot both Canon and Fuji. To get my Canon files looking consistent with my Fuji files, I have to do so in post-processing. I use Really Nice Images ( ) in Lightroom Classic, but there are certainly other film packs that attempt to mimic Fuji films. None is an exact replica though. Even Fuji's in-camera film simulations are not identical to their actual films, but Fuji gets a lot closer than others I would think.
I use Canon's Picture Style Editor to create custom Picture Styles that come very close in camera to my own editing style (the camera can store three custom Picture Styles in addition to the standard ones).
One can probably get as close with the Canon Picture Style Editor as one can get in post processing...the Picture Style Editor has essentially the same tools as a post-processing editor.
But the trick is to identify just what one does in post-processing to get that look, and then, starting with a standard Picture Style, replicate the same changes in the Picture Style Editor.
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Back in 2015, Amazon Prime Video was the first subscription-based streaming service to introduce the ability to download movies and TV shows for offline viewing on mobile devices. For travelers and users with limited data plans that like to watch films and episodes on the go, this was a godsend. Amazon has updated its apps many times since then, but the process remains relatively the same.
So, whenever you're traveling with your iPhone or Android phone, you'll be able to watch almost any Prime movie and catch up on Amazon original series such as The Man in the High Castle or The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. There is a two-fold benefit to this: You have access to terrific content right away, and you don't have to worry about wasting any cellular data or connecting to a shoddy flight or hotel Wi-Fi hotspot to watch something.
Just about every movie and TV show is available to download through Amazon Prime Video, but that only applies to members that pay. That means primary Amazon Prime and Amazon Prime Video subscribers are the lucky ones. Unfortunately, Amazon Household members are left out in the cold, with only a handful of downloadable titles available. More on that later.
The Amazon Prime Video app is available for both iOS and Android. If you don't have the app already installed, you'll have to install it from the App Store or Play Store, respectively. Your iPhone will have to be running iOS 9.3 or later, while your Android device will need to be running Android 4.1 or later.
Once installed, log in to your Amazon account with the proper email and password. If you have two-factor authentication turned on, you will be sent a six-digit verification code through text or email that you'll have to enter on the screen. Or, if you use an authentication app, you'll find the verification code in that.
Before you begin downloading anything, you'll want to check the download quality first and adjust it to your preference or needs. To check, open the "Settings" tab (on iOS) or tap the hamburger menu and then "Settings" (Android). Next, tap on either "Streaming & Downloading" (iOS) or "Stream & Download" (Android).
If you have an iPhone, there's a toggle for "Allow highest quality when on Wi-Fi," which does exactly as it sounds. No matter what quality you pick above it, whenever a download occurs on Wi-Fi, it will always download in the "Best" quality.
Android also has an "Always Ask" option available, which is enabled by default. That means that every time you go to download a video, you'll be able to verify or change the quality on a case-by-case basis. If you only care about one video quality setting, you can disable this to download content right away.
There are a few more settings you should be aware of in regards to downloading. First, whether or not downloads will happen over cellular data. In the "Streaming & Downloading" or "Stream & Download" menu, "Download on Wi-Fi Only" will be enabled by default. If you have unlimited data or significant data allotments and don't care about using it, by all means, toggle this off if you want.
Android users who have SD cards will have one more option to think about: "Download Videos to SD Card." If you don't want to waste internal storage, this is a good idea. Once you have some titles downloaded, you'll also be able to set it so that the videos are automatically deleted when the SD card is removed.
With all of the settings out of the way, now it's just a matter of downloading the movies and TV shows you want to watch offline. Tap on the title you want to download, and in the description page for it, you will see the "Download" button front and center. The exact placement of the buttons may vary on different devices or operating systems, but it is fairly self-explanatory.
Movies will just have the "Download" button while TV shows will have the option to download an entire season if it's included in Prime. If you just want to download individual episodes, you can do that too.
For those of you using Android that didn't disable "Always Ask," you'll get a pop-up each time where you can choose which quality you want. On that pop-up, you can also check "Make this my default setting" before selecting the quality, and you won't get the pop-up anymore unless you go back into the settings to enable it.
If you plan on traveling overseas to another country, you'll want to download content locally in the US before you embark on your trip because the same content you may want to watch may not be available in the region you'll be visiting, so you may not be able to download certain titles while there.
Amazon doesn't explicitly say which titles are not available for download, but in checking out a good amount of titles, we only found a few of the many thousands of available titles that couldn't be downloaded and those were non-original content. All Amazon original content is good to download if you're a primary paying member.
However, there is a limit to the number of titles you can download offline. According to Amazon, depending on your location, you have a maximum of 15 to 25 movies or TV shows you can download across all of your devices, which is where that auto-delete from SD cards option on Android comes in handy.
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