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Anonymous
>>223391 This is quite possibly the stupidest photography-related idea I've ever heard. You can just use the distance scale on your lens to focus at the hyperfocal distance. If your lens lacks focusing scales, it is probably cheap and crappy. Given the price of holographic sights, it's reasonable to assume that they would be equally if not more expensive for cameras. Thus is would be both cheaper and better for your pictures to simply purchase a better lens that has a focusing scale than to buy a holographic sight that wouldn't do anything anyway.
Which brings me to my next point. Do you have the slightest idea what a holographic sight is? It doesn't project a laser anywhere or calculate the distance to anything. It simply an optical sight that is designed so that the cross hairs (or in this case, red dot) moves in response to your eye point and line of sight, so you can shoot accurately without your eye being precisely lined up as with iron sights or a precise distance away as with a traditional scope.
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