Leica FlexOffice includes basic tools for data transfer and data management for FlexLine instruments. The product is based on the well established and reliable platform of Leica Geo Office, but is simplified in functionality and complexity to suit the new range of FlexLine instruments in an ideal way. However, the software also provides full flexibility to optionally offer enhanced functionality to exactly match your requirements.

The Leicaflex SL is a beautiful camera, in my eyes. It has an industrial minimalist aesthetic, typical for its day, with just three elements of aluminum, black plastic, and bright nickel accents. The plastic is unfortunately slippery and feels quite cheap, especially on this camera, but it has maintained its sheen over the decades. The gently sloping camera back, resembling hunched shoulders, are a unique hallmark of the design that is echoed in the R8 and R9 cameras several generations later.


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I consider myself almost British a product as Ilford, my father having come to Canada from Huddersfield, Yorkshire. You enjoy the Leicaflexes as much as anyone, I can tell. They are great cameras, they do indeed look fantastic, and the size and weight of them gives me the confidence to walk my rural road alone at sunset, knowing that I have a weapon to fend off the howling coyotes!

Now the four lenses announced with the Leicaflex are 35/2.8, 50/2, 90,2.8, 135/2.8. When the M4 was introduced in 1967, it had frames in the viewfinder for those four focal lengths. Further, I have to say that having used interchangeable lens SLR cameras since 1976, those four focal lengths are by far the most useful. Indeed it is widely written that many International Photojournalists rarely use any other lenses except the 35mm and the 90mm. Of course the 135mm was first produced for the Leica 11 in 1932 and is the longest focal length for which a frame appears in the viewfinder of the Current M cameras, going back to the M3 of 1954. So just what were Leitz telling us in 1964?

I bought my Leicaflex SL in 1973. Traded in my Leicaflex Standard for it. It works as well as the day I bought it. I love the quality of the construction, its heft, the bright viewfinder, and the sound of the shutter going off. Reminded me of the sound of a Rolls Royce door closing. HOWEVER I did not understand why they put on a cheap red plastic lens release lever. They spent a fortune making that camera out of the finest materials. Then, it happened. I went to take off my 50 Summicron to put on the 90 f2.8 Elmarit. As I pushed down on the red plastic lever, it broke off. I was furious. Never replaced it. Been meaning to do so but years went by and I never got around to doing it. I kept the Summicron on after that and never changed lenses. In fact, it looks better without that red piece of plastic which stood out like a sore thumb.

Not certain the need for 2 cam lenses instead of 3 cam is a disadvantage. Leitz reflex glass in the SL2 days wasn't exactly shabby. Two cam lenses are a bit cheaper on the used market also which helps. And should you ever upgrade to a more modern body, all but he older 21's can have a third cam slapped on them also.

As far as I know this is an SL and Leicaflex Standard issue, not SL2. The SL2's mirror allows the same clearance as the R bodies do, where the mirror of the Standard or SL will hit the rear element of several lenses, including:

          leica instrument tools       .              .           .

Adjust and operate the camera with the integrated on-screen display (OSD) directly via a monitor. The OSD also offers intuitive annotation, overlay and network tools for more flexibility to enhance your documentation.

All of these options are good (I'm particularly fond of Terraflex), but they lack integration with Pro and AGOL. Adding post-processing capabilities to FieldMaps would allow us to take full advantage of our equipment, safeguarding against things like cell-towers being down while also streamlining the workflow.

Canon's RF mount is still in its infancy, but that's not stopping the brand from flexing some muscle and releasing the ultra-fast, ultra-pricey 85mm F1.2L. It's a tad large on the the EOS R, but offers jaw-dropping performance.

Laser point data were imported into processing bins in TerraScan, and manual calibration was performed to assess the system offsets for pitch, roll, heading and scale (mirror flex). Using a geometric relationship developed by Watershed Sciences, each of these offsets was resolved and corrected if necessary.

Hypomyelination, a neurological condition characterized by decreased production of myelin sheets by glial cells, often has no known etiology. Elucidating the genetic causes of hypomyelination provides a better understanding of myelination, as well as means to diagnose, council, and treat patients. Here, we present evidence that YIPPEE LIKE 3 (YPEL3), a gene whose developmental role was previously unknown, is required for central and peripheral glial cell development. We identified a child with a constellation of clinical features including cerebral hypomyelination, abnormal peripheral nerve conduction, hypotonia, areflexia, and hypertrophic peripheral nerves. Exome and genome sequencing revealed a de novo mutation that creates a frameshift in the open reading frame of YPEL3, leading to an early stop codon. We used zebrafish as a model system to validate that YPEL3 mutations are causative of neuropathy. We found that ypel3 is expressed in the zebrafish central and peripheral nervous system. Using CRISPR/Cas9 technology, we created zebrafish mutants carrying a genomic lesion similar to that of the patient. Our analysis revealed that Ypel3 is required for development of oligodendrocyte precursor cells, timely exit of the perineurial glial precursors from the central nervous system (CNS), formation of the perineurium, and Schwann cell maturation. Consistent with these observations, zebrafish ypel3 mutants have metabolomic signatures characteristic of oligodendrocyte and Schwann cell differentiation defects, show decreased levels of Myelin basic protein in the central and peripheral nervous system, and develop defasciculated peripheral nerves. Locomotion defects were observed in adult zebrafish ypel3 mutants. These studies demonstrate that Ypel3 is a novel gene required for perineurial cell development and glial myelination.

Of course, we can refund the VAT to you - provided that the goods are sent by us to an address within the EU and you send us an "export certificate" filled out by you and the customs office for the purpose of VAT refund. You must present the completed export certificate, your passport, proof of purchase/invoice and the original unused and packaged goods to your customs office at the last point where you leave the EU territory when importing into a non-EU country and have it completed, stamped and signed by the customs authorities. You then send the original document in the original to our address in Dsseldorf - sending it by fax, by e-mail or a copy by post will not be recognised by the German tax office (in this case we will unfortunately not be able to refund the VAT amount to you).


You can download the export certificate via the following link, then print it out, fill it in yourself (please only items 2 to 10, items 11 and 12 will be filled in by us and from item 13 onwards the border customs office will fill in the form) and then together with the goods present to the customs office:


Download the documents and the leaflet:


Download export certificate here (PDF)


Leaflet on VAT exemption for export deliveries (PDF)


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