LCD screen without "live view" camera support is only useful in:
- Setting the camera; and
- Examining the images after the fact.
To "catch the moment" is best accomplished by gluing your eye on the viewfinder and keep shooting..."no film/processing cost" is cheap.
To ensure good exposure is best accomplished by bracketing...don't worry about "no film/processing cost".
Since this is Rangefinderforum, I presume everyone had accepted that tight framing is not in the shooting protocol.
"To be overly concerned about setting a
perfect exposure is a neurosis many people never overcome." (
The Photography Catalog on the Leica M4, edited by Norman Snyder, 1976)
Therefore, the best solution is somehow modify an iPod with a mini-USB plug-in to
read the camera memory chip (as if its own)...or even copy the contents over; review the pictures, do the RGB bit...after the action.
An iPod screen is much larger, with far better resolution, and iPod can support many more GB...kind of an image vault in your pocket.
How about it, Mr. Jobs? There is much money to be made in this.