On Wed, 23 Mar 2005 14:26:03 -0800, Bruce Dayton
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A friend of mine asked for help in picking a DSLR.  She has been using
> a Nikon N75 with 28-80 zoom to date.  Prior to that she was using an
> old Canon FD mount body.
> 
> When she talked to me, she was just about ready to buy the D70 based
> on internet hype and the local store being a strong Nikon seller.
> 
> We discussed what she wanted to do with the camera now and in the not
> too distant future.  Her indication was that, besides family/kid
> memories, she had started into portraiture and wanted to continue that
> direction.
> 
> So with that in mind, I discussed and worked with her on the angle of
> manually focusing and composing.  She is a convert away from AF for
> this type of work now.  So suddenly the quality of the viewfinder
> became very important.  The ability to clearly compose and focus on
> the matte screen became among her most important features of the
> camera.
> 
> I sent her around to look at the D70, RebelXT, Evolt and DS bodies
> with this in mind.  She came back and reported the order of usability
> of the viewfinder for the stated purpose as
> Pentax *istDS
> Canon RebelXT
> Olympus Evolt
> Nikon D70
> 
> Yesterday I stopped at the local store and tried the D70 and *istDS
> side by side with 50mm lenses on each.  The D70 was barely usable (I
> would hate it) and the *istDS was clearly better for this.
> 
> So today she picked up her brand new *istDS.  I was very pleased that
> someone would get past the hype and really pick something that would
> work best for what they wanted to do.
> 
> --

Great story, Bruce.  

I've recently had the opportunity to talk DSLR's to a few people who
want to make the jump from digital p&s, and they inevitabley mention
the Canon DigiRebel or the Nikon N70.  I've told them to at least
consider the *istDs.  I've told each of them that the viewfinder is
one of the things that separates them, and suggested going to a store
to look through each of those cameras before buying.

I've mentioned the availability of relatively cheap high-quality
manual-focus Pentax glass.  As yet, I don't know if anyone took my
advice.

I've been trying.  You've been succeeding!  <vbg>

What's good for Pentax is good for this list, I say.  Great work.

cheers,
frank
-- 
"Sharpness is a bourgeois concept."  -Henri Cartier-Bresson

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