I have watched it. But I do not understand how the Auto ISO settings works then? Isn't the purpose of setting it to auto to allow camera to change its value based upon amount of ambient light? If you lock the exposure, the ISO gets locked at...
To some extent, yes. But JPEG has only 8 bit color depth meaning that if you push it a bit too much in editing it falls appart pretty quickly. Banding in skies and other artefacts start to creep in before too long. Raw format offers much more...
Well, then you are not doing what raw files are made for. PROCESSING. Meaning adjusting image parameters. WB, highlights, shadows, saturation, contrast, curves, sharpness, noise reduction to name the basics. If you want the best IQ your camera is...
Jpeg is a lossy process designed to reduce file size. Part of the process (done in camera) is to compare pixels to surrounding areas and then balance the image accordingly. This smooths out the colors, but at the loss of detail, as @Johnmcl7...
Does not any auto setting give exposure jumps as the light changes based on where the camera is pointing? That is usually a major headache in post and without correcting the "final" video looks terrible. What am I missing?