I've never understood the mentality behind "digi=machine-gunning."
I've used dSLR's (Pentax *istDL and Olympus E-420) and a fair number of p+s but it didn't change the number of shots I took. (Well, just a little, when it's a new camera, but this is the same with anything new).
I carry a camera every day, though lots of days I don't shoot anything. Some days I don't even bring the camera up to my eye.
It's good to be ready, open to any circumstance, but 150 shots a day, 365 days per year is...well, I don't know.
My friend Jan in Berlin, as a project, used one P&S to make one photograph a day for a year in 1999. I thought it an interesting project to find one thing each day you wished to include in the collection leading to Y2K.
There was certainly a time when the technology of photography, among many things, required almost a guild philosophy, requiring participants to apprentice themselves to the work.
Technology frees us from the long preamble to mere participation, but not from the thought and feeling you are looking for in a serious photograph.
I have met people who just pick up a camera and achieve something good with the first roll, and many thereafter, and I know people who are going to be snap shot photographers. There is a lot in between. I can say, that there is a feeling when you find a photograph, and it is continued if you capture the image.
Much of photography is a found art, knowing where to look plus having sufficient technology to capture it, completes it.
I do not pretend to have figured it all out, I still wonder, at times, if there are "magic" rolls of film, because sometimes I have a single roll of film upon which I record unrelated images, a number of which are good. Images you feel when you are capturing them. I also can predict that I will find better photographs when I am in the company of my friend and fellow photographer Zuzana, whether I am shooting her, or with her. No explanation.
I suppose if it were all easily explained, it would be much more common.
I do know people who have more "magic" rolls than I.
I very much admire Sudek, an early 20th century photographer with one arm and the technology of the time producing great work. I have met people who have crossed paths with this one armed photographer with a huge tripod and camera in the night streets of Prague.
A lot of the gear fascinates me, well, because some represents a more elegant way of finding some of what I am looking for, and I admit, I enjoy mechanical things on a number of levels.
They are not mutually exclusive, but the synergy between them is no means guaranteed, that is up to the operator.
Regards, John