I spent most of today walking around South Beach with my M8, trying to get used to it. I used the "A" setting, and just had fun shooting anything that looked interesting to me, figuring that the more I use it, the quicker I'll get used to it.
Boy, it took two hours before I stopped making the stupid mistake of leaving the lens cap on every so often. The camera was trying to warn me with an on-screen message, but I didn't yet know enough to realize what it was telling me. After a couple of hours though, I remembered automatically. I guess I should get the IR filter and use that as a lens protector instead.
The second thing that bothered me was most of the time, my 35mm lens (yeah, it becomes a 41 or something, effectively) seemed too restrictive. This is something I will fix tomorrow in an order from CameraQuest.
I also found it "annoying" for quite a while to have to focus manually, something my D3 doesn't require. By the end of the day, this was no big deal, and I was using it as I think I used the early M's a lifetime ago, when there was no such thing as autofocus. Boy, you can get awfully lazy once you get too used to automation.
I just looked over the images. They're all in 'jpg' which was a mistake, as I thought I had switched to 'raw' mode. Again no big deal, will correct that, and remember to check from now on. I like the way the D3 tells you all these things in a separate screen, but I like the simplicity of how Leica does things - it's just a matter of learning how to use the camera properly, and remembering to check on the settings before going out with the camera.
One nice thing - nobody really paid any attention to the M8. With just about everyone on the street walking around with some kind of camera, the M8 just looked too old or boring or something, and it never even once attracted anyone's attention.
As I expected, the more I use the M8, the more I enjoy using it, and the more I understand it. I'll be happy when I'm as comfortable with it as I am with my D3.
I also need to get fully used to the menu system. I'm spoiled by the D3 where to delete an image, you have to hit a button twice. With the Leica, I found myself deleting one image I didn't intend to, because I hit the wrong button. I know it's my fault, and the way Leica does it is quite simple - it's just a matter of my getting used to things. Hit the "delete" button, and when you see an image you don't want, hit the "set" button. Personally, I'd rather you hit "set" and have the camera ask "are you sure" or something, and only after you hit the button the second time would the image be deleted.
Let's see, I also learned to check what exposures the camera was selecting. There was a dancer in front of a bar, and I left the camera at f/16 or so, which meant at ISO 160 the camera selected 1/30th, which was too slow to capture the movement. My fault, not the camera's... I need to "think" more. I now realize that the relevant information is displayed on the 'review' screen at the top after taking an image, so I have to get in the habit of checking it. I think I should also turn on the "auto ISO" feature, which I haven't done yet. That might prompt the camera to make up for mistakes I make.
I guess I need to learn how and where to post images in this forum. Maybe there's a link for uploading images. That, or post them on my own website and provide a link.
All in all, I was very pleased with the camera. After reading the responses up above, I'm also glad I got the M8.2 instead of just an M8, but I suspect I'd be enjoying either of them right now.