On Wed, 8 Mar 2006, John Forbes wrote:
On Wed, 08 Mar 2006 00:07:21 -0000, Kostas Kavoussanakis
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 7 Mar 2006, John Forbes wrote:
On Tue, 07 Mar 2006 14:57:31 -0000, Kostas Kavoussanakis
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Tue, 7 Mar 2006, Vic MacBournie wrote:
In my opinion, your best bet in the istd if you want to duplicate the
quality of the MZs. It is not up to MZ-S standards but it's not too far
behind. I have both and find the build quality comparable...
I forgot: the interface is also different; on the -S you set the aperture
from the lens, on the -D (all of them) this is only possible in Manual
mode (which reverts to HyperManual).
This is rather misleading. You set the aperture on the camera body,
unless the lens is a K or M lens, in which case you set it on the lens,
with the body set to manual mode. There have been endless fruitless
discussions on the merits of setting the aperture on the body versus
setting it on the lens, but even the die-hards get used quite quickly to
doing it on the body. The only people for whom this is an still issue is
people who are still using film, and have no idea what they are missing.
My description was very accurate; find a hole.
Your description is a sieve.
What you wrote is inaccurate.
You're either a comedian or a politician in the mould of Blair. See below.
On the -Digis you can set the aperture on the lens provided
it has a ring (so this is not limited to M/Ks).
No, Kostas, you can't. When off the A setting, the camera will take the
picture at full aperture, whatever you set the lens at (except in Manual
mode).
Now, read that again, and write it out fifty times.
Actually, I wrote it once, in the first place, and required no
correction, let alone an accusation my statement was misleading, thank
you. Here is what I wrote in case you cannot read it above:
"on the -S you set the aperture from the lens, on the -D (all of them)
this is only possible in Manual mode (which reverts to HyperManual)."
I suggest you confine yourself to responding to questions you know something
about. Limiting, I know, but better for your credibility in the long run.
I suggest that you only reply after you read what the person has
written, irrespective of your preconception for that person.
Difficult, I guess, but better for your credibility in the long run.
Practice.
Kostas