The Canon R5 does all of that in camera, producing an MP4 video as the final product! I just gave it a try and it was pretty easy. Here is what you do:
At 10 second intervals an hour is 360 shots and will play for 12 seconds At 5 second intervals an hour is 720 shots and will play for 24 seconds At 6 second intervals an hour is 600 shots and will play for 20 secondsThis presumes a 30 fps playback rate.
When I was all done, I removed the CF card and put it into my card reader. Then on my linux system:
cd /run/media/tom/EOS_DIGITAL/DCIM/100CANON$ ls -l -rwxr-xr-x 1 tom tom 270004912 Mar 24 18:36 581A5975.MP4 cp 581A5975.MP4 /home/tom/clouds.mp4This is a 270M file -- not the sort of thing I can easily email to people.
file clouds.mp4 clouds.mp4: ISO Media, MP4 v2 [ISO 14496-14] vlc clouds.mp4 VLC media player 3.0.20 Vetinari (revision 3.0.20-0-g6f0d0ab126b) [00007fdfdcc10430] avcodec decoder error: cannot start codec (libopenh264) [00007fdfdcc10430] main decoder error: Codec `h264' (H264 - MPEG-4 AVC (part 10)) is not supported. su dnf install openh264 vlc clouds.mp4 [00007f0008001f70] glx gl error: cannot create GLX contextSo, I needed to install openh264, but then I run into this "glx" error and vlc just gives me a black screen. I do some searching and read that vlc won't work with Wayland (but might using X11 if I wanted to go through whatever nightmare that might involve).
What does work is just typing this URL into my browser:
file:///home/tom/clouds.mp4I'll wait for Fedora 40 or 41 to fix the vlc and Wayland problem.
Tom's Digital Photography Info / [email protected]