Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/06/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Stupid questions: why do you use a computer ? Does your car provide electronic management of ignition ? I think your judgement on who makes the picture - camera or person - is also a caricature. I'll argue even further: a highly proactive high tech setup potentially (I insist on the 'potentially') allows the user to concentrate more on some of the more strategic aspects of the process: composition, relevance of the image, expressions, incidents, colours, shapes, whatever... Time spent doing this is, in my point of view, MUCH more useful than playing with aperture ring, focussing ring and speed dial. Interesting POV. However...First, how much time do you really spend "playing with aperture ring...(and) speed dial"? Yes, focusing is a deliberate process with a non-autofocus camera, but that hasn't stopped photographers from capturing "the decisive moment" in war, sports, disaster - all occurring at high speed - and just plain life. I would argue that all the bells and whistles are themselves the distraction, and that simply looking through a "picture" window with a white frame appropriate for a given lens allows me to concentrate on what isn't in the frame, what is in it, what colors, moods, shapes, shadings, etc., are within the frame or about to be within in. I am not for an instant suggesting, as I type this E-mail on my laptop and it will be at the server in a matter of nano-seconds and on its way to you, that technology is bad. God bless technology. And, under certain circumstances and for certain purposes, God bless technology loaded cameras. But for now, as long as I can focus, I'll stick with the basics.