SteveMc
Newbie
Hi, I want to purchase a Fuji x100 but I have one question I can't find the answer to.
If using manual focus set up at, say 7 feet to take some street photography type shots does this setting stay the same when the camera is turned off and then on again?
Thanks
Steve
If using manual focus set up at, say 7 feet to take some street photography type shots does this setting stay the same when the camera is turned off and then on again?
Thanks
Steve
tbhv55
Well-known
If using manual focus set up at, say 7 feet to take some street photography type shots does this setting stay the same when the camera is turned off and then on again?
Yes, the focus distance setting will survive an ON/OFF cycle.
Presumably, this answer means that you can now go and buy an x100...? ;¬)
SteveMc
Newbie
Thank you, I thought I read it a couple of days ago but can't for the life of me find the article.
Yes, consider it ordererd
Is that a good decision?
Yes, consider it ordererd
Is that a good decision?
daveleo
what?
Thank you, I thought I read it a couple of days ago but can't for the life of me find the article.
Yes, consider it ordererd
Is that a good decision?
If you have done your homework
teleparallel
Established
There are rumors the x100 will be replaced soon, announced January 7 . Maybe you should wait and see the new model.
tbhv55
Well-known
consider it ordererd
Is that a good decision?
I'd say "Yes", presuming that you've done sufficient research about the x100 to understand what you're getting (and also to understand what you're NOT getting!).
I'd say that most users' problems arise when they get an x100 in an attempt to get away from the DSLR experience, but still expect it to be like a DSLR in use... it isn't!
patsesson
Member
There are rumors the x100 will be replaced soon, announced January 7 . Maybe you should wait and see the new model.
Where have theese rumors come ?
Godfrey
somewhat colored
There are rumors the x100 will be replaced soon, announced January 7 . Maybe you should wait and see the new model.
Or maybe you should buy the X100 you have been studying and researching, know the good and bad points of, and have accepted as what you want rather than buying something brand new with unknown warts and brilliances to take advantage of.
I rarely buy on the bleeding edge. I bought my 2003 E-1 in 2008, after it had been obsoleted several times over. Know what? It's *still* my favorite DSLR, and the only one I've kept despite even better performance from its ancestors and competitors. It produces the photo quality I like and works the way I want.
G
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