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Superb image quality - slow Raw

Started Apr 19, 2020 | User reviews
Press Correspondent
Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Superb image quality - slow Raw

This model has an excellent bright lens with a good bokeh, excellent large Sony sensor, and great JPEG processor (with lens distortion correction, etc.). Out of the camera JPEGs above water are stunning. Underwater images by nature must be edited and therefore shot in Raw, but there is a 5-second time lag after each Raw shot. The screen is bright above water, but don't expect it to be very useful under water (perhaps similar across brands). The built quality is great. The resale value is limited due to a non-mainstream brand name. Highly recommended, but only after SeaLife fixes the 5-second lag in Raw.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
SeaLife DC2000
20 megapixels • 3 screen
Announced: Nov 23, 2016
Press Correspondent's score
4.0
Average community score
4.0
bad for good for
Kids / pets
excellent
Action / sports
good
Landscapes / scenery
excellent
Portraits
great
Low light (without flash)
great
Flash photography (social)
good
Studio / still life
good
= community average
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

if you want a 1" sony sensor, it's easy.   Buy an RX100 from Sony.

Or buy a G7X from Canon.

Both have vastly better speed, controls, and a zoom range.

Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

The models you mention are not waterproof and don’t compete with SeaLife. Sony RX0 is waterproof with a 1” sensor, but has a 4 times smaller screen (by area) and its lens is nowhere as bright plus too wide. Among waterproof cameras (without an enclosure) SeaLife DC2000 has no competition considering the lens and sensor combination.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

Press Correspondent wrote:

The models you mention are not waterproof and don’t compete with SeaLife. Sony RX0 is waterproof with a 1” sensor, but has a 4 times smaller screen (by area) and its lens is nowhere as bright plus too wide. Among waterproof cameras (without an enclosure) SeaLife DC2000 has no competition considering the lens and sensor combination.

you got it backwards - the Sealife doesn't compete with the Sony or the Canon or even the Olympus TG with its smaller sensor.

You said it yourself - it takes 5s per raw shot, and compact cameras generally need RAW to correct the WB.    My wife's G7X II takes 8 raw frame per second for several seconds, which she used to good avail when white sharks were doing swim bys.   It also has a far more useful 24-100mm range.    The DC2000 has a narrow 31mm as the only option - not good for wide, not good for macro.    And it's offerings for a light or a strobe are too close to the lens.  Hello, backscatter.

And it does have an enclosure which you would want to use past 30ft, nevermind its 60 ft promise.   So what's the gain, in reality?    The big loss is after the dive when you have a camera that is severely limited for topside photography-  you'll need to pack two cameras.

Barmaglot_07 Contributing Member • Posts: 633
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw
1

Press Correspondent wrote:

The models you mention are not waterproof and don’t compete with SeaLife. Sony RX0 is waterproof with a 1” sensor, but has a 4 times smaller screen (by area) and its lens is nowhere as bright plus too wide. Among waterproof cameras (without an enclosure) SeaLife DC2000 has no competition considering the lens and sensor combination.

The problem with waterproofing on DC2000 is that being limited to 18m, it's mostly useless for scuba divers. Most common recreational certification is to 30m, and dive sites all over the world are mapped accordingly. Therefore, if you want to take your DC2000 on a dive trip, you need to house it... and then you basically have a bulky, slow, overpriced RX100 III with a severely limited control set and a fixed focal length lens. The only situations where the waterproofing will come into play are:

  1. The housing leaks. An RX100 will almost certainly die in a housing flood, whereas a DC2000 will almost certainly survive. However, the proliferation of vacuum test systems in even entry-level compact housings these days makes floods much less likely than they used to be.
  2. The user is limited to snorkeling rather than scuba diving. In this case, they're unlikely to exceed the DC2000's depth limits, while the relatively compact dimensions of a bare DC2000 vs a housed RX100 provide a certain advantage.
 Barmaglot_07's gear list:Barmaglot_07's gear list
Sony a6300 Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM Sony E 30mm F3.5 Macro Sony E 18-200mm F3.5-6.3 OSS LE Sony E 10-18mm F4 OSS +5 more
Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

Agreed. SeaLife DC2000 delivers the best image quality underwater without an enclosure. Naturally this mostly applies to snorkeling, which is a large market. The camera also takes great images above water with a very versatile focal length of 31mm. So you don't need to take two cameras on a snorkeling trip.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

Press Correspondent wrote:

Agreed. SeaLife DC2000 delivers the best image quality underwater without an enclosure. Naturally this mostly applies to snorkeling, which is a large market. The camera also takes great images above water with a very versatile focal length of 31mm. So you don't need to take two cameras on a snorkeling trip.

Snort.   31mm is hardly versatile above water.   You absolutely need a second camera.   And if we're only talking about snorkeling depths, then the smaller sensor on the otherwise superior TG cameras (microscope mode and 4k video) will hold up.   It's in the deeper waters as the light drops that a 1" sensor becomes valuable.

Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

It is quite remarkable that among so many camera brands and models flooding the consumer market SeaLife DC2000 remains the only available option with a large sensor, fast lens, waterproof without an enclosure. It works great on snorkeling trips both above and under water where a zoom is virtually useless while the 31mm focal length is ideal. A 5-second lag between frames would not work for sports, but is not a showstopper for snorkeling.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

My second camera for travel is Panasonic LX100 II. I love it and use as a walk around unit, but leave it behind while sailing to the coral reefs for snorkeling with SeaLife DC2000. I prefer a fixed lens for this purpose and 31mm has been ideal. I love a good bokeh and shallow DOF of a large sensor. Olympus is a good brand, but a 1/2.3" sensor mostly makes boring snapshots.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

Press Correspondent wrote:

It is quite remarkable that among so many camera brands and models flooding the consumer market SeaLife DC2000 remains the only available option with a large sensor, fast lens, waterproof without an enclosure. It works great on snorkeling trips both above and under water where a zoom is virtually useless while the 31mm focal length is ideal A 5-second lag between frames would not work for sports, but is not a showstopper for snorkeling.

I'm having a hard time believing you've actually taken a camera into the water, and your screen name only tends to reinforce that suspicion.  "A zoom is virtually useless."   Seriously?   The fixed lens has its advantages, but the market voted for zooms decades ago.  Snorkelers can't "move with their feet" very effectively.

Sealife has a habit of moving, so I'd rather be able to get 40-100 frames in 5 seconds rather than 1.

The DC2000 is a 4 year old model.   Sealife's subsequent models use 1/2.3" sensors.   It's a unicorn because Sony, Canon, Olympus, Panasonic and others meet the UW needs better.   If you go to any reputable Uw photography shop and see their recommendations for compact camera rigs, guess which one you will not see?   In a decade of liveaboards, I've seen a Sealife model once....in 2008.

> My second camera for travel is Panasonic LX100 II.

That would be an immensely preferable choice with its 4/3rds sensor.   The only knock against this model is the zoom being limited to 75mm, so weaker for macro.   But not nearly as weak as 31mm would be, and the 24mm on the wide also beats it.

Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

You can argue around a whole day long, but the truth is the same: SeaLife DC2000 remains the only available model with a large sensor, fast lens, waterproof without an enclosure.

No one is forcing you to buy SeaLife. If you like small sensors with zooms, great. Plenty of them are available for you to enjoy.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

my point remains the same - there are better choices available.   No price is worth a 5 second delay between shots.

kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw
Press Correspondent
OP Press Correspondent Veteran Member • Posts: 3,362
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

kelpdiver wrote:

my point remains the same - there are better choices available.

"Better" is subjective. For you "better" may be a small sensor with a dim zoom and not waterproof, but for those who prefer a large sensor with a bright lens and waterproof, there is no "better" or even other choice than SeaLife DC2000.

No price is worth a 5 second delay between shots.

No one should buy it from SeaLife until the company fixes this problem. I bought mine for $200 second hand and have been quite happy with it.

 Press Correspondent's gear list:Press Correspondent's gear list
SeaLife DC2000 Panasonic LX100 II Canon EOS 5D Mark III Canon EF 50mm F1.4 USM Canon EF 70-200mm F4L USM +12 more
kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

Press Correspondent wrote:

kelpdiver wrote:

my point remains the same - there are better choices available.

"Better" is subjective. For you "better" may be a small sensor with a dim zoom and not waterproof, but for those who prefer a large sensor with a bright lens and waterproof, there is no "better" or even other choice than SeaLife DC2000.

The list I provided is 5 cameras with newer, same sized sensor or larger.  1 smaller.

Better can certainly be subjective, but find me *any* camera shop that recommends it.

No price is worth a 5 second delay between shots.

No one should buy it from SeaLife until the company fixes this problem. I bought mine for $200 second hand and have been quite happy with it.

It's a 4 year old model - they aren't fixing it.   They've released two newer models since with a 1/2.3" sensor.

Your second paragraph greatly contradicts the first.     "There's nothing better" vs "Don't buy it until unicorns rule the earth."   ???

bartjeej Regular Member • Posts: 416
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

kelpdiver wrote:

Press Correspondent wrote:

Agreed. SeaLife DC2000 delivers the best image quality underwater without an enclosure. Naturally this mostly applies to snorkeling, which is a large market. The camera also takes great images above water with a very versatile focal length of 31mm. So you don't need to take two cameras on a snorkeling trip.

Snort. 31mm is hardly versatile above water. You absolutely need a second camera. And if we're only talking about snorkeling depths, then the smaller sensor on the otherwise superior TG cameras (microscope mode and 4k video) will hold up. It's in the deeper waters as the light drops that a 1" sensor becomes valuable.

Snort... I think you havent been paying attention. "31mm is hardly versatile above water" lol... Fun challenge: name me one fixed focal length camera which is not an action camera or made by Sigma, with a focal length other than 28mm equivalent,  35mm equivalent, or inbetween.

Ricoh GR: 28mm

Leica Q: 28mm

SeaLife DC2000: 31mm

Sony RX1: oncpaper 35, in practice 32ish

Leica X / X-U: 35mm

Fuji X100 series: 35mm

And... That's it! So apparently every manufacturer of fixed focal length compacts (apart from Sigma who make a range of 4 compacts with 4 focal lengths, one of which is 28mm) agrees that this focal length range is the one to go for if you have only 1 focal length to choose from.

I am only a novice scuba diver with open water license so the 18m rating suits me to a T. The 5 second delay is what has kept me from buying the SeaLife - everything else strikes me as exactly what I need. Although I'd like it even better if they added OIS, and went the Sigma route and did a range of cameras with different focal lengths.

One of the other 1" sensor camera manufacturers making a natively waterproof version of their fast lens zooms would float my boat as well, though... Just keep it more compact than the hideously clumsy housings that exist for them now. Yes, underwater it is fine, but when canyoning or spelunking I'd also appreciate a high quality waterproof camera, that is actually compact

kelpdiver Veteran Member • Posts: 5,564
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw
1

bartjeej wrote:

Snort... I think you havent been paying attention. "31mm is hardly versatile above water" lol... Fun challenge: name me one fixed focal length camera which is not an action camera or made by Sigma, with a focal length other than 28mm equivalent, 35mm equivalent, or inbetween.

And all of them are narrow niche markets, populated with a lot of nostalgia for times when you had no choice, and some zealotry around the superiority of the fixed lens.

If you had to be restricted to a fixed lens, then yes, in the 30s is where you'd likely want to be.   But YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE RESTRICTED.   That's the point!   (If you really prefer fixed lenses, that's what ILCs are for)

I am only a novice scuba diver with open water license so the 18m rating suits me to a T. The 5 second delay is what has kept me from buying the SeaLife - everything else strikes me as exactly what I need. Although I'd like it even better if they added OIS, and went the Sigma route and did a range of cameras with different focal lengths.

when you see devices that claim to be waterproof* (with the usual legal weasel language) to 20, 30, 50 ft, you probably shouldn't be going to that depth.   Those ratings are for static pressure, and a diver or snorkel imposes dynamic pressure.   50m rated watches are useless for divers as a consequence, even though well beyond the recreational limit.

I wouldn't presume that you would hold to that 18m rating when a manta swims by and drifts down another 6m very casually.   Photogs find themselves pushing their nitrox limits without intent all the time when pursuing subjects in the open blue.   There's also nothing scary about the difference between 60 and 100ft - I just encourage you to gradually explore the deeper depths so you get a good feel for what this does to your air consumption and the impacts of narcosis.   The latter shows itself as you shift from 30-40+m - tunnel vision develops and your brain has trouble with multitasking.

I would use the DC2000 or the TG to 30ft, otherwise I'll put them in true housings.   I've seen more than a few of this class of camera sitting on the sandy bottoms, flooded.   Tiny elongated doors make for fiddly orings.    Clamshell cases with one big oring are nearly bulletproof.

OIS, btw, is really unnecessary for a 31mm focal length.  Rare that there would be a case for 1/10th or 1/15th shutter speeds.

One of the other 1" sensor camera manufacturers making a natively waterproof version of their fast lens zooms would float my boat as well, though... Just keep it more compact than the hideously clumsy housings that exist for them now. Yes, underwater it is fine, but when canyoning or spelunking I'd also appreciate a high quality waterproof camera, that is actually compact

Do you find yourself spelunking or canyoning often?   Or is this like Americans buying SUVs and never leaving the pavement, but always wanting to be able to?   But both of those are environments where a versatile focal length is essential.   You're bound to the ropes or the path.   You want wider than 30some mm to get the shots of the participants, and you want the length to capture scenes not right next to you.   But if you want very compact and you want zoom, you give up the larger sensor.   It's not that big a set back - billions are getting by with cell phone cameras.

For $200, the DC2000 is a decent buy.   Especially if you are just starting UW, or only expect to use it 10 dives a year, like so many.  My first big rig was a Canon 20D at a time when the 50D was current.   I got it quite cheap (relatively speaking) and got 7 years use of it before wanting live view and a bigger, sharper LCD.   Most people use the Hero as a cheap entry point.

But for list price (700), the DC2000 is a terrible decision when so many better, newer ones are out there.   The Hero7 is the cheaper, more compact, more versatile answer.   The TG-6 is still slightly cheaper, does much better macro and video, and can actually take a decent lighting system.   The other 1" models will cost more to house, but will perform significantly better, and the ceiling on what they can deliver is substantially higher.   If you decide that there is a max heft you're willing to carry, you could stay with one of these models for a decade.    (Finding someone's consignment sale  for a 2018 model could be the best middle ground)

bartjeej Regular Member • Posts: 416
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw
1

kelpdiver wrote:

bartjeej wrote:

Snort... I think you havent been paying attention. "31mm is hardly versatile above water" lol... Fun challenge: name me one fixed focal length camera which is not an action camera or made by Sigma, with a focal length other than 28mm equivalent, 35mm equivalent, or inbetween.

And all of them are narrow niche markets, populated with a lot of nostalgia for times when you had no choice, and some zealotry around the superiority of the fixed lens.

If you had to be restricted to a fixed lens, then yes, in the 30s is where you'd likely want to be. But YOU DON'T HAVE TO BE RESTRICTED. That's the point! (If you really prefer fixed lenses, that's what ILCs are for)

If the focal length / sensor size / aperture combination you want exists in a compact camera, i dont see the need  to go for an ILC. I did plenty of holidays with just my X100, and was happy with the single focal length. Also very happy with it fitting in my jacket or cargo pants pocket, unlike most ILCs to tue extent that they even have a comparable lens (only Canons 22mm f/2 for the EOS M system comes close).

I am only a novice scuba diver with open water license so the 18m rating suits me to a T. The 5 second delay is what has kept me from buying the SeaLife - everything else strikes me as exactly what I need. Although I'd like it even better if they added OIS, and went the Sigma route and did a range of cameras with different focal lengths.

when you see devices that claim to be waterproof* (with the usual legal weasel language) to 20, 30, 50 ft, you probably shouldn't be going to that depth. Those ratings are for static pressure, and a diver or snorkel imposes dynamic pressure. 50m rated watches are useless for divers as a consequence, even though well beyond the recreational limit.

Well, I know from experience that my Suunto Core does just fine at 18m depth... Nowhere newr 50, obviously, but it was a nice confirmation nonetheless

I wouldn't presume that you would hold to that 18m rating when a manta swims by and drifts down another 6m very casually. Photogs find themselves pushing their nitrox limits without intent all the time when pursuing subjects in the open blue. There's also nothing scary about the difference between 60 and 100ft - I just encourage you to gradually explore the deeper depths so you get a good feel for what this does to your air consumption and the impacts of narcosis. The latter shows itself as you shift from 30-40+m - tunnel vision develops and your brain has trouble with multitasking.

So far I've only been on dives with instructor or guide present so I've stuck to the 18m limit fastidiously, but yes, i can see that happening when you see something cool, especially since by 18m you're indeed beyond the point where a few meters makes a massive difference to your body... But isn't the same true for cameras?

I would use the DC2000 or the TG to 30ft, otherwise I'll put them in true housings. I've seen more than a few of this class of camera sitting on the sandy bottoms, flooded. Tiny elongated doors make for fiddly orings. Clamshell cases with one big oring are nearly bulletproof.

OIS, btw, is really unnecessary for a 31mm focal length. Rare that there would be a case for 1/10th or 1/15th shutter speeds.

For showing flowing water (not underwater obviously, more in the canyoning scenario) or very low light (cave with headtorch), I will take all the stabilisation i can get

One of the other 1" sensor camera manufacturers making a natively waterproof version of their fast lens zooms would float my boat as well, though... Just keep it more compact than the hideously clumsy housings that exist for them now. Yes, underwater it is fine, but when canyoning or spelunking I'd also appreciate a high quality waterproof camera, that is actually compact

Do you find yourself spelunking or canyoning often? Or is this like Americans buying SUVs and never leaving the pavement, but always wanting to be able to? But both of those are environments where a versatile focal length is essential. You're bound to the ropes or the path.

Depending on the fragility and risks, some less frequented caves have a lot of room for roaming about, i follow the guide's advice. But yes, flexibility is nice. If, for a given size, I have to choose between a well judged fixed focal length with a larger sensor or a zoom lens with smaller sensor, i do prefer the former.

Regarding frequency: not regularly, for sure, but these are the kind of trips i save up for - and that i try to orient my gear towards. Caves, jungles with frequent river crossings, deserts... All environments where a small water- and dustproof camera with high quality comes in handier than a large housing, or a more delicate camera (even an Olympus OM-D or similar) that needs to be taken out of a protective bag first when an opportunity presents itself.

You want wider than 30some mm to get the shots of the participants, and you want the length to capture scenes not right next to you. But if you want very compact and you want zoom, you give up the larger sensor. It's not that big a set back - billions are getting by with cell phone cameras.

For $200, the DC2000 is a decent buy. Especially if you are just starting UW, or only expect to use it 10 dives a year, like so many. My first big rig was a Canon 20D at a time when the 50D was current. I got it quite cheap (relatively speaking) and got 7 years use of it before wanting live view and a bigger, sharper LCD. Most people use the Hero as a cheap entry point.

But for list price (700), the DC2000 is a terrible decision when so many better, newer ones are out there. The Hero7 is the cheaper, more compact, more versatile answer. The TG-6 is still slightly cheaper, does much better macro and video, and can actually take a decent lighting system. The other 1" models will cost more to house, but will perform significantly better, and the ceiling on what they can deliver is substantially higher. If you decide that there is a max heft you're willing to carry, you could stay with one of these models for a decade. (Finding someone's consignment sale for a 2018 model could be the best middle ground)

Regarding the gopro type cameras: my reason for bringing something other than a phone in the first place is to get shots that I'd like to print Big. Gopro is too distorted and difficult to compose with, small sensor compacts only deliver nice quality in good light. I find 1" sensors the lower limit for the kind of dependable image quality I'm after. Phones, so far, don't cut it yet for large prints, but do fine for web sharing. A Sony RX0 with a faster lens would start to get close: I wouldn't mind it being a bit bigger and having a usable screen to compose with, though.

Or SeaLife could just get its processing power / firmware in order and speed up the DC2000. As it is, indeed, not worth the MSRP for me.

Yes, I am difficult. But i dont think i am unique in my wishes...

Barmaglot_07 Contributing Member • Posts: 633
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw

bartjeej wrote:

I am only a novice scuba diver with open water license so the 18m rating suits me to a T.

General advice for new divers is to first gain some experience and only then bring along a camera. Photography adds significant task loading, and if managing buoyancy, breathing, team awareness, etc, has not become automatic, getting distracted by the camera can be plain dangerous. The venn diagram of 'divers with sufficient experience to be responsible underwater photographers' and 'divers not certified to go below 18 meters' has very little overlap.

 Barmaglot_07's gear list:Barmaglot_07's gear list
Sony a6300 Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM Sony E 30mm F3.5 Macro Sony E 18-200mm F3.5-6.3 OSS LE Sony E 10-18mm F4 OSS +5 more
bartjeej Regular Member • Posts: 416
Re: Superb image quality - slow Raw
1

Barmaglot_07 wrote:

bartjeej wrote:

I am only a novice scuba diver with open water license so the 18m rating suits me to a T.

General advice for new divers is to first gain some experience and only then bring along a camera. Photography adds significant task loading, and if managing buoyancy, breathing, team awareness, etc, has not become automatic, getting distracted by the camera can be plain dangerous. The venn diagram of 'divers with sufficient experience to be responsible underwater photographers' and 'divers not certified to go below 18 meters' has very little overlap.

Thanks for the sensible advice, Bermaglot so far I've only handled a camera underwater when the entire team was stationary and the instructor / guide was aware of it.

My team awareness in particular is indeed not where it should be yet (that whole 3D aspect and sound travelling differently makes a massive difference to our normal surface-bound way of experiencing our position relative to each other!), so I don't feel ready to strike out on my own yet.

Still, I have a pretty good idea of what I do and don't like in terms of a camera for diving (although, as you could probably tell from my previous posts, i am mostly looking for a compact, high quality, everything-proof camera, rather than a fully specialized diving set-up. I just can't afford to buy a different set-up for every activity, at least not without losing the budget to perform those activities in the first place ;-D )

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