>>3891131Photography is a mainstream hobby in Japan. It's very common to see people with DSLRs and unusual gear at spots near train stations, airports and sea ports. You'll also see all sorts of strange and unusual gear being used at sports events and local traditional events. Watch any Grand Sumo Basho and you'll see elderly men with high grade DSLRs with flash units in regular seats photographing their favourite rikishi. Meanwhile all the professional sports photographers are lined up with their Canon EOS 1D cameras.
>>3891043Technically?
Obtain a new fresh SD card. Most cameras will save each image as a jpeg at least, and if you're taking a longer time-lapse, then you're going to end up with several hundred jpegs. If you're dealing with raw+jpeg, then you're going to fill up a 64gb SD card real fast.
A lot of cameras will be able to give you a video file of the timelapse too, and you can select the quality of video on board too, but be aware, this will likely be an .avi file which is notoriously bad at compression. These files are often known as "motion jpeg", but don't confuse them with .mp4 files.
You can choose to not generate a video file, but this will mean you need to feed the photos into PC software for this.
You can also batch process RAWs for your time lapse, but I do not recommend this, as this will probably make your life hell.
https://youtu.be/yi3uDMZ7QWUHere's a timelapse I took a while ago. It's set to 5 fps which actually looks pretty bad... I recommend 15 fps or higher, but be aware that the .avi might be lower res. I picked the 5 fps seeing because that gave me 4k video. Be aware that higher res is appealing especially if you plan to display the video on a 4k or even 8k TV.