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Now, your particular camera that you have, I really don't recommend you upgrading at all to be honest with you. It is a ATSC sensor. It's not full-frame, but it's not micro four-thirds and it sure should have that little sensor in your phone. So you've got a lot of dynamic range and you can do a lot with it if you learn post-editing techniques, right? But your camera, from what I'm reading here, yes, it's an older style and it is a DSLR, it's not mirrorless, but you don't need these things to become a very decent photographer. Now here's the difference between a phone camera and your camera. And even though your camera, when was it released? 2016, right? When you take a picture on a large sensor, you're going to get more information. And if you shoot it in RAW, you're going to even get more information. And what that gives you is the ability to change the structure and the feel and the look and the sense of what that picture really looks like. I could take a picture on your camera and edit it ten different ways and you'll see ten different pictures that don't even come close to looking the same, okay, aesthetically. On a camera phone, you really don't have that ability. You can alter the picture to a certain extent, but let's say you were underexposed, okay? You brought daylight but you screwed up and the picture looks extremely dark. On your camera, you might be able to bring up the exposure by two, three, four, five, or even six stops and save that picture and make it look like it was the way it was supposed to because you shot RAW and you shot with a large sensor. And that's the difference between a camera phone and your camera. You understand?

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