wgerrard
Veteran
I ask if a digital interchangeable lens camera like the K1000 would be successful today?
Would you buy a digital -- SLR or RF -- that allowed you to set aperture and shutter speed and forced you to focus manually? And did nothing else? (Let's assume it produces RAW files, since conversion to JPEG is a frill, right?)
Or, in matters digital, do you think in for a penny, for a pound, and happily leverage every automated feature on offer?
I'm in the second camp. I view and distribute photos online. I'm more interested in improving the quality of image displays on laptop screens than I am in how good a print looks. I like to think I know enough to know when to override a camera's choice of shutter speed and aperture. But I also know that, almost all the time, I won't need to do that. And don't even ask if I can better a digital's auto ISO choices and, critically, it's focus skills.
So, no. I would not buy a digital Pentax K1000.
Would you?
Would you buy a digital -- SLR or RF -- that allowed you to set aperture and shutter speed and forced you to focus manually? And did nothing else? (Let's assume it produces RAW files, since conversion to JPEG is a frill, right?)
Or, in matters digital, do you think in for a penny, for a pound, and happily leverage every automated feature on offer?
I'm in the second camp. I view and distribute photos online. I'm more interested in improving the quality of image displays on laptop screens than I am in how good a print looks. I like to think I know enough to know when to override a camera's choice of shutter speed and aperture. But I also know that, almost all the time, I won't need to do that. And don't even ask if I can better a digital's auto ISO choices and, critically, it's focus skills.
So, no. I would not buy a digital Pentax K1000.
Would you?
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