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New: Zeniko RF12 M round head mini flash for Canon, Sony, Nikon, Fujifilm, Olympus, and Pentax cameras

Zeniko (Godox sub-brand) launched a new RF12 M round-head mini flash with a universal hot shoe, compatible with Canon, Sony, Nikon, Fujifilm, Olympus, and Pentax cameras.

Additional information:

  • Price: $49.90
  • Design: Round head with proprietary optics + included dome diffuser. Tilts up to 90° and swivels 270°. Ultra-light at 90g and pocketable.
  • Power: 6 manual levels (1/32 to 1/1). Recycle time ~2.5s at full power. Modest but capable output for its size.
  • Battery: Built-in 350mAh Li-ion. Up to 500 full-power flashes per charge. USB-C charging (~1h 10m).
  • Triggering: Manual flash only. Built-in photocell with S1/S2 optical slave modes (S2 works with TTL cameras). No TTL or wireless radio.

New: Zeniko ZA12 mini retro flash

The post New: Zeniko RF12 M round head mini flash for Canon, Sony, Nikon, Fujifilm, Olympus, and Pentax cameras appeared first on Photo Rumors.

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GoPro warns of “Substantial Doubt” about its future


GoPro has disclosed “substantial doubt” about its ability to continue as a going concern in amended financial filings released June 1, 2026. The company and its auditor cited ongoing losses, negative cash flow, looming debt covenant breaches, and “unprecedented” spikes in memory costs – up as much as 115% — driven by AI demand.

The warning comes on top of weak Q1 2026 results: revenue fell 26% year-over-year to $99 million, while GAAP gross margin collapsed to 4.3% from 32.1% a year earlier. GoPro expects continued losses and negative cash flow in the near term.

GoPro is up for sale again

Just three weeks earlier, the company launched its new MISSION series cameras and announced a strategic review that could lead to a sale or merger. Shares dropped sharply on the going-concern news.

New GoPro Mission 1 Pro camera unveiled with 50MP 1″ sensor and a model with MFT mount

Here is the quote from the financial filings:

Substantial Doubt About the Company’s Ability to Continue as a Going Concern

The accompanying consolidated financial statements have been prepared assuming that the Company will continue as a going concern. As discussed in Note 1 to the consolidated financial statements, the Company has incurred operating losses and negative operating cash flows, and has obligations under its financing arrangements which become due within the next twelve months if certain covenants are not met, that raise substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern. Management’s plans in regard to these matters are also described in Note 1. The consolidated financial statements do not include any adjustments that might result from the outcome of this uncertainty. (source)

Update on the GoPro vs. Insta360 lawsuit

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Zeiss announced new Horizon anamorphic lenses


The Zeiss teaser from two weeks ago was for a new line of Horizon full-frame 2x anamorphic cinema prime lenses:

  • Seven focal lengths: 35mm, 40mm, 50mm, 75mm, 100mm, 150mm, 200mm
  • Fast T2.3 aperture (T2.9 on the 200mm)
  • Built-in focus and iris motors integrated into the lens body (no external motors needed)
  • Swappable look-tuning rear element for adjustable character while keeping calibration
  • Consistent 114mm front diameter and LPL mount across the set
  • Classic 2x look with pronounced oval bokeh and stretched depth/scale
  • Neutral, low-aberration baseline optimized for VFX and creative tuning
  • Initial shipping (40/50/75mm) starts in September 2026; full set rolls out through 2027
  • Pricing not yet announced (check availability at B&H Photo
  • Product page
  • Additional information

ZEISS Introduces Horizon Anamorphic: Full-Frame 2x Anamorphics with a New Lens Technology Platform

ZEISS unveils the Horizon Anamorphic series, a new lineup of full frame 2x anamorphic cinema lenses designed to deliver a distinctive cinematic look along with a new lens technology platform that brings the speed and precision demanded by contemporary production workflows. Spanning 35 mm to 200 mm across seven focal lengths, Horizon lenses combine their anamorphic look with pronounced oval bokeh and a stretched sense of spatial depth with a lightweight, fully integrated motor system that eliminates the need for external focus or iris motors.

“With Horizon Anamorphics we bring the next chapter of ZEISS cinema optics to life by combining cutting‑edge technology with a refined image that preserves the human, cinematic feel”, explains Christophe Casenave, Head of Business Unit Cinematography at ZEISS.

One lens, multiple looks

The Horizon series is engineered with a neutral baseline look designed to encourage versatility, accepting filtration, LUTs, and diverse lighting approaches without imposing a baked-in feel. Instead, ZEISS introduces an optional interchangeable look tuning back element — a proprietary optical integration that allows crew to dial-in a nuanced individual lens look. Mounted via the ZEISS Interchangeable Mount System (IMS), it alters sharpness, contrast, and overall character with a simple eight-screw swap, while preserving scale accuracy and calibration.

Seamless integration

Whisper-quiet and ultra-reliable focus and iris motors are built directly into the lens body, offering compatibility with ARRI and Preston LCS systems via serial or LBUS connections. Factory-calibrated absolute encoders store all lens scales within the lens. This creates a single consistent source for metadata, eliminating the need for re-mapping scales or re-rigging motors between setups. Dual displays and touch panels directly on the lens barrel allow quick focus or iris checks.

“Horizon marks a new reference platform for us that integrates lens motors, data and ecosystem compatibility and by that enables faster, end‑to‑end production workflows,” Casenave adds.

Low distortion, stable color, and minimized aberrations make the Horizon lenses well-suited to VFX-intensive productions requiring clean keying, tracking, and CG integration. All seven lenses come with LPL mount and share a consistent 114mm front diameter to support balanced handheld, gimbal, drone, crane, and car-rig operation. A fast T2.3 stop across the full frame coverage set (T2.9 at 200 mm) provides shallow-depth-of-field anamorphic even in challenging lighting conditions. Built-in processing and on-board memory are designed to support future expansions including broader ecosystem compatibility, extended metadata capabilities, and potential autofocus integration.

Availability

The 40mm, 50mm, and 75mm Horizon Anamorphic lenses are scheduled to ship in September 2026 through authorized ZEISS cinema dealers, with 35mm, 100mm, 150mm, and 200mm focal lengths following in 2026 and 2027.

New Cooke, Thypoch, Blazar, and Zeiss cinema lenses

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The latest Leica SL3-P camera rumors


Here are the latest/updated Leica SL3-P camera rumors:

  • 44.3MP sensor (based on the Panasonic S1RII that was announced in February 2025, see previous coverage)
  • Improved AF (better than the SL3-S)
  • Video capabilities could be lower than those of other SL3 models
  • Rumored to be announced around May-June 2026
  • The new Leica SL3-P model will be positioned between the current Leica SL3 (60MP) and the Leica SL2-S (24MP)
  • Approximately 800 autofocus points
  • The body and operating concept are very similar to the new Panasonic generation
  • Expected retail price around €5,900
  • There is also some talk about Leica introducing a new SL 100mm APO macro lens
  • The Leica SL3-P camera is rumored to be announced at the end of June (around June 22-25th)

This just in: Chinese HSG reportedly in advanced talks to acquire Blackstone’s and, potentially, Kaufmann’s stakes in Leica Camera.

New Leica SL camera model based on the Panasonic S1RII rumored to be announced next year

Leica SL3-P camera rumors

What’s next for Leica? (May 2026 update)

The post The latest Leica SL3-P camera rumors appeared first on Photo Rumors.

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