Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamPost by Miles BaderMy cellphone has a great camera (truly amazing considering the size it
fits into), but using an external lcd instead of a viewfinder is
complete misery in many situations...
who said anything about an external lcd?
I mean what every cellphone / pad / ... has: an LCD on the outside of
the unit (as opposed to a viewfinder which you put up to your eye).
Well -- the movie pros have been moving to video assist for years,
apparently preferring video monitors placed wherever they're convenient
to a dim eyepiece where, if you get your eye in exactly the right place,
you can see what the camera is seeing. (35mm motion picture gear should
have better optical viewfinders than 16mm did, but I hear even those
weren't very good.)
Despite 30 years using viewfinders for still photography before I got to
digital, I'm quite happy with the external LCD most of the time. Very
occasionally it's a bit hard to see in the sun -- but, if that were a
big problem, I could get a hood or something to shade it. Hasn't been
a big enough problem to consider spending $30 on yet. When I use a view
camera I have to carry a big black cloth to put over me so I can see the
image on the ground glass, digital is much better than that!
Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamPost by Miles BaderI often wish I had a real
camera, not for the increased quality, but just so I can take pictures
in the sunlight without needing 3 hands and yoga training.
you must have one of the most unusual cellphones ever made.
Hmm, no it's pretty normal (for Japan), although it has an unusually
good quality camera.
What I mean is this: When it's sunny, it's quite common that the LCD
display on a cellphone is completely obscured by glare _and/or_ the
sun causes glare/artifacts through the camera lens.
Three hands are useful, certainly :-).
Post by Miles BaderSo what I end up doing is, holding the phone with one hand, while
trying to shield the display enough to see something with another,
_and_ trying to use another hand to shade the lens to avoid the worst
glare effects in the image. As you can see, that's three hands... :]
Since I don't have three hands, what I actually end up doing usually
involves quite a bit of contortion, trying to use one hand for both,
or stand in the shade of a pole or something or ...... anyway, it's a
big pain.
For an actual camera, you could buy a screen hood, but I don't think
that's available for the cell phone size screens (and there's no place
to mount it, anyway).
Post by Miles BaderA camera viewfinder avoids the problems with the display, at least,
and generally makes everything more manageable. This is why I'd like
one.
Yep, they do that. I shoot outside so little, and can work around the
sun most of the time anyway, it's a non-issue for me, but I know lots of
people shoot outside most of the time.
Post by Miles Bader[and a pad, is _worse_, because you basically need two hands to hold
it up (the ipad, at least is quite heavy [and the 3rd gen even heavier,
from all reports]).]
Post by nospamPost by Miles Bader[And tablets?! A big fad right now,
tablets are unquestionably *not* a fad. their popularity is growing
like crazy and you're in denial if you think otherwise.
... which doesn't mean they're not a fad of course.
Fad implies popularityh at the time, but also implies it won't last. We
don't know if it will last; I expect it will, myself.
Post by Miles BaderAnyway, I'm sure they have a good solid niche, but they certainly
aren't perfect, or some sort of universal replacement for all other
devices. The "faddishness" is people who suddenly think they _are_
the latter.
For lots of people they're a better fit than a laptop. Not for me,
though.
Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamPost by Miles Baderbut also a _really_ horrible
form-factor for a camera, even for a very uncritical audience
tablets may not be the ideal form factor if their sole function was a
camera but if you happen to have a tablet with you, why not its camera?
That was my point: Tablets are cumbersome enough that people _don't_
usually bring them along wherever they go. Most probably _do_ always
carry their cellphone, however, so cellphones are much better bet as
the future of casual photography than pads are.
More people will carry a tablet than a laptop, though. And I've been in
rooms at parties with 5 people using their laptops sometimes.
Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamhaving a 10" or even 7" viewfinder is extremely nice and with a tripod
mount, you essentially have a view camera, one that is vastly more
portable than a real view camera.
Er, well, except for whole image quality thing which is really the
only reason people put up with view cameras in the first place...
And the movements, and the really really smooth tonality from the big
negative.
Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamPost by Miles BaderMost pictures, even by
casual photographers aren't taken in the living room, but in places
where it's very unlikely people will have dragged a tablet along.]
yet they drag a bulky slr with a bag full of lenses wherever they go.
also, what makes you think they won't drag a tablet along?
[Some] people put up with the cumbersomeness of SLRs because they want
the advantages of an SLR: good quality images[*], speed, etc. Tablets
provide mediocre quality images, no better than a cell phone or P&S.
People that demand such features can't get them from a tablet, and
people that don't demand them are likely to prefer to avoid dragging
anything along (as their phone or P&S can likely provide the same
quality with greater convenience).
[*] Many aspects of which are very hard to provide without large
lenses (high quality zooms, popular effects like shallow DOF and bokeh
which are impractical to provide with very small sensors and small
apertures), making it unlikely that the sort of very small embedded
cameras in phones / pads will ever completely really take over the
DSLR market.
On the other hand, the P&S market is mostly *NOT* interested in anything
beyond snapshots. That's being decimated by phones already.
Post by Miles BaderPost by nospamunlike an slr with lenses, a tablet fits in a jacket pocket.
That's a bit of a stretch .... :]
And who wears dress jackets these days anyway?
--
David Dyer-Bennet, dd-***@dd-b.net; http://dd-b.net/
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Dragaera: http://dragaera.info