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- From: tse@ra.nrl.navy.mil (Anthony Tse)
- Subject: Re: Camera Feature Wars - Photo Getting Like Video
- Message-ID: <BxvyyC.EFp@ra.nrl.navy.mil>
- Sender: usenet@ra.nrl.navy.mil
- Organization: Naval Research Lab, Washington, DC
- References: <27595@oasys.dt.navy.mil= <13850@texsun.Central.Sun.COM> <1992Nov17.212755.10296@odin.corp.sgi.com>
- Distribution: usa
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 1992 00:35:00 GMT
- Lines: 21
-
- In article <1992Nov17.212755.10296@odin.corp.sgi.com= bongers@gto400.asd.sgi.com (Hans L. Bongers) writes:
- =In article <13850@texsun.Central.Sun.COM>, dbernard@clesun.Central.Sun.COM (Dave Bernard) writes:
- =|> Mark Goldberg makes some good points. New camera features give more and more
- =|> control over less and less. But in reality, once the film is loaded in your
- =|> camera, the only controls you the photographer have are three: shutter speed,
- =|> focus, and aperture. This is true whether you have a Leica M3 or a bar-code
- =|> reading, card-eating, fuzzy-brained wonder.
- =|>
- =|> Dave
- =
- =What a limited viewpoint of control. Besides shutter speed, focus & aperature,
- =you might consider filters & movement (aka panning). In addition the photographer
- =can control lighting & subject...
- =
- =Should I continue or have you opened your mind to the possibilities???
-
- I hope you are not implying one cannot do all you mentioned with a
- all manual M3.
-
- -Anthony
-
-