bmattock
Veteran
I was thinking about this, but lost the thread where it was earlier today. Sorry!
Shutter lag-time would be one problem.
Low ISO would be another.
And most of the digicam breed have very small sensors. Not a problem in and of themselves, but a 9mm lens, even if it is 'equivalent' to a 28mm lens in the 35mm film world, still has the DOF of a 9mm lens. Kind of hard to do any creative DOF effects with one (yes, I know, you can do it with macro).
Anyway, I think to be a good street-shooter, a digital camera would have to have an optical viewfinder, a decent-sized sensor (for the DOF factor), high ISO settings (for low-light) and manual focusing (for no shutter lag).
Dang. When I get done describing the requirements, I have the answer before I even come up with a 'use case'. I believe we're back to the Epson RD-1 again.
I guess we have to work on getting that price point down. I sure can't afford one!
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Shutter lag-time would be one problem.
Low ISO would be another.
And most of the digicam breed have very small sensors. Not a problem in and of themselves, but a 9mm lens, even if it is 'equivalent' to a 28mm lens in the 35mm film world, still has the DOF of a 9mm lens. Kind of hard to do any creative DOF effects with one (yes, I know, you can do it with macro).
Anyway, I think to be a good street-shooter, a digital camera would have to have an optical viewfinder, a decent-sized sensor (for the DOF factor), high ISO settings (for low-light) and manual focusing (for no shutter lag).
Dang. When I get done describing the requirements, I have the answer before I even come up with a 'use case'. I believe we're back to the Epson RD-1 again.
I guess we have to work on getting that price point down. I sure can't afford one!
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks