J. C. O'Connell wrote:
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WILLIAM ROBB WRITES in post quote BELOW:
"I need to point out that AE is still available with K/M
lenses on Pentax digital cameras"
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>
NO ITS NOT. Green button thing is not AE by any stanards
of today or yesterday. Its metered manual. You have
to MANUALLY take a new meter reading every time you change the aperture
setting
which you don't have to do with AE and the camera does not continously
AUTOMATICALLY
adjust exposure for changes in subject or lighting either.
That what AE is. Continous AUTOMATIC exposure without
ANY need for operator intervention. When the operator
has to take new reading manually every time any of
these factors change its metered manual mode.
WHAT PART OF THIS DON'T YOU UNDERSTAND?
Why is it you have to always be so obstreperous, J.C.?
Is it a gene thing, or what?
These days, rarely does a kind word slip out or do you post without
shouting!
Are you that unhappy with how your life is going? (That's a rhetorical
question, BTW.)
keith
So your entire premise below is false because
you have overlooked the key MAJOR difference between metered
manual and AE and you are mistakenly calling metered
manual AE when it isnt. K/M lenses can and have been providing
true AE for 30 years, the green button thing is like
the old super-takumars of the 1960's. Stop down metered
manual. Not the same level of automation at all, and not
even close.
JCO
-----Original Message-----
From: William Robb [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, September 22, 2005 10:32 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Camera engineering (This is signifigant)
----- Original Message -----
From: "J. C. O'Connell"
Subject: RE: Camera engineering (This is signifigant)
NICE COMEBACK - too bad it doesnt
address the subject matter - BTW, if you think you are making me look
retarded, then why are YOU the one trying run from the postions you
took on the subject matter with a barage of personal
attacks and NO SUBJECT MATTER REBUTALS WHATSOVER??
That's called a "diversion" tactic for losers.
I suggest you post a followup clarifying and explaining the
validity of those positions IF YOU CAN. I for one would
love to see it. I am in the mood for some really
good comedy actually,,,
John, I've answered your questions already, however, in the interest of
redundancy, let me requote your questions, and see if I can't put my answer
into smaller words for you....
You asked:
"how can you say the program AE is important but COMPLETELY DROPPING AE
ALTOGETHER from K/M lenses with zero compatablity issues is fine?"
As a preamble, I need to point out that AE is still available with K/M
lenses on Pentax digital cameras, so your point about completely dropping AE
is wrong.
You should probably use a Pentax DSLR for a while before you make blanket
statements that are incorrect.
Most consumers want to buy a camera, and not have to do anything other than
push the shutter button. They don't want to worry about, think about, or
have to know about camera exposure settings.
They buy SLR cameras mostly because they get sold on the idea of
interchangable lenses (though most of the time they take the kit zoom lens
and may buy a short telephoto zoom and nothing else), not because they want
more exposure controls that they most likely don't understand, nor want to
understand.
This I know from my years of selling equipment and serving customers at the
retail level.
Programmed AE is important to the bulk of amateur users, because this is how
they want to operate the camera.Any other automatic exposure method still
requires the user to input information into the camera. Users don't want
this, they want complete automation.
So, programmed exposure is important, since it allows the consumer to use
the camera the way he or she wants to use it, shutter or aperture preferred
automatic is not important, since they are exposure modes rarely used by
most camera users.
So, dropping aperture preferred AE as an exposure mode, had they done it,
wouldn't really be a big deal.
However, aperture controlled AE is still available on the Pentax DSLRs,
admitedly in a somewhat modified form, for those who want to use older
lenses, so the feature has not been completely dropped as you like to think
it is.
William Robb