With CS1, you'd have to convert your RAWs to DNG first. But that's  
not a big deal.
Paul
On Oct 10, 2006, at 9:20 PM, Doug Franklin wrote:

> gfen wrote:
>
>> #1 Lesson: Not caring about film cost kicks ass!
>
> Absolutely.  Mine paid for itself in film (non) costs in two and a  
> half
> pro events, ignoring the other shooting I did.
>
>> I need to read the manual.
>
> Uh yeah.  :-)
>
>> Antishake is pretty clever. I'm hand holding below my old cutoff,  
>> 1/45.
>
> Awesome!  I can't wait to try it.
>
>> The wireless remote doesn't let you utilize the autowinder, or  
>> whatever
>> we'd call it. Multiple shot feature. Eh. Whatever.
>
> Really?  Even when the camera is in sequential exposure mode? (Or
> whatever they call it)  On the *ist D, single exposure mode is  
> shown as
> a rectangle in the LCD.  Sequential exposure mode is shown as  
> what's to
> look like a stack of rectangles, sort of like
>
>     +--------+
>     |        |+
>     +--------+|+
>       +-------+|
>         +------+
>
>> That having a 50/1.4 turn into a 75/1.4 isn't desirable.
>
> No, but having my 300/4.5 "turn into" a 450/4.5 is pretty handy and
> pretty cool.  And having my 400/5.6 "turn into" a 600/5.6 is even  
> better
> sometimes.  Not to mention that since you're only using the center of
> the lens' coverage, you typically get better sharpness out to the  
> edges
> of the digital image.  Then again, I use long lenses far more than  
> short
> ones.
>
>> Wait, I have to set ISO? It does for me? Huh? What? Eh?
>
> I really wish the *ist D showed the ASA/ISO in the viewfinder or on  
> the
> top LCD panel.  I keep forgetting to reset the darned thing. :-)  I  
> just
> noticed a minute ago that the photos I added to the "Stuck Filter"
> thread a couple of days ago were shot at ASA 1600, a leftover from the
> night shots at the Petit le Mans a week ago.
>
>> Multiple AF points seems to be useless.
>
> Not for me.  When I'm panning fast moving racecars, I've found that  
> the
> AF is usually "behind" what I'm seeing in the viewfinder.  I think it
> has to do with the amount the car moves during the "lock time" between
> the shutter contact closing and the shutter tripping.  It may also  
> have
> to do with the way the intersection of the "focus sphere" with the
> moving car changes as the car rotates and I rotate.
>
> What happens is that if the car is moving left-to-right across my  
> field
> of view, the most in focus part of the car is typically aft of the
> cockpit, even though the camera locks focus on the center AF  
> point.  But
> I've found that if I set the selected AF point to the one just to the
> right of that, I see the focus toward the front of the car just before
> the shutter trips, but in the photo the part that's most in focus is
> around the center of the car.  That all assumes, of course, that I've
> done my job in panning and not shaking and the whole thing's not  
> just a
> mess of motion blur.
>
>> Evidently, raw images from the camera don't go into Photoshop?
>
> They can go into newer Photoshop versions (CS1 and above?) that have
> Adobe Camera Raw installed.
>
>> I wish I knew what I was doing.
>
> Welcome to the club.
>
>> I need to learn that I have a preview screen right on teh camera,  
>> and I
>> don't need to go home, download the photos into the PC and then  
>> see what I
>> got.
>
> That's "technically" known as "chimping".  It can cause you to miss
> shots and cause you to be ridiculed by your photographic compatriots.
> If you do it in the wrong place, like on the Jersey barrier beside a
> race track, it can get you killed. :-)
>
>> I haven't really tried full manual mode, so I haven't had to get  
>> used to
>> using wheels and buttons in combinations, although I rarely used  
>> anything
>> but Av mode, anyways.
>
> "Hyper" mode is awesome.
>
>> Alas, the days of the prime lens are probably as over as the days
>> of film flagship bodies.
>
> I sure as hell hope not.  After finally acquiring a couple of  
> really top
> notch F* and FA* primes, it would take a stupendous zoom to make me
> switch.  I'd rather take a separate body for each lens.  Some of the
> shots from those lenses are just incredible.
>
> The major bummer from my perspective is a buffer small enough to fill
> the way I use the camera.  On the MZ-S, I've shot as many as  
> fifteen in
> quick succession as a big incident on the track unfolded.  For me, the
> five/six shot buffer on the *ist D is OK 90% of the time, but that  
> other
> 10% it's really a pain in the neck waiting on the camera to write the
> buffer.
>
> -- 
> Thanks,
> DougF (KG4LMZ)
>
> -- 
> PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> [email protected]
> http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net


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