I posted this last week in another thread:

Quote Originally Posted by btaylor View Post
FYI

Magic Lantern v2.3 (unified) was released yesterday (for supporters - i.e. those willing to donate as little as 5 euro) for the 5D Mark II. It now includes a lot of the features not previously available in the old version for the 5D2 which was more centred around video users.

Some of the key features include:

Zebras:
shows areas of the frame where highlights are blown out or shadows are crushed. This has been improved on previous versions whereby it was a bit slow.

Automatic HDR Bracketing: unlimited number of bracketed shots, bulb mode enabled, fixed or bracketed ISO

Timelapse: included intervalometer, improved bulb ramping for time lapse in changing light conditions, dedicated sunrise and sunset modes, full manual ramping when required.

Advanced FPS Control: full control over FPS in video, from 0.2 FPS to 35 fps

Advanced ISO Control: mostly for videography, slight improvements in shadows and highlights. Alternate ISOs available.

There's a bunch of other features too. Looks pretty good. The free version will be released on August 13th.

I'm going to download it tonight and have a play, particulartly interested in the time lapse stuff.

Will report back after the weekend.

Ben
Quote Originally Posted by btaylor View Post
Ok so magic lantern is the greatest thing that has happened to my 5D2 since I strapped the 70-200mm f/2.8 II to the front of it. There's some amazing features.

The intervalometer works perfectly, haven't had a chance to play around with the bulb ramping features yet but I will next sunset/sunrise.

The in-camera HDR is also very nice. I hand held a shot in the lounge room and set it to bracket at 0.5ev and let magic lantern automatically decide how many shots were required. It took 15 shots, aligned and merged them to a pretty damn good shot - especially hand held.

There's a million other features and it's going to take me some time to get my head around them all but so far I am highly impressed.

Oh - there's a function in there to prevent you having to touch the camera at all to trigger it, hence reducing camera shake. You wave your hand three times in front the the LCD ambient light sensor and the shutter triggers, amazing!
Since then I've been playing with it a bit and haven't had the camera hang, except that little option that says "Do not press this" or something like that. Naturally, I did press it and it just pixelates the LCD until you power off the camera - cheeky buggers.

I'm enjoying it though, lots and lots of good options there.