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35mm Handbook 66

Rick Franchuk - TranSpecT Consulting, has returned with a book that's a little different then the norm - Michael Langford's 35mm Handbook. For those with the photographic bent, click below to read more about fine-tuning your art.
35mm Handbook
author Michael Langford
pages 224
publisher Alfred A. Knopf
rating 9/10
reviewer Rick Franchuk - TranSpecT Consulting
ISBN
summary An outstanding reference for beginner-to-intermediate level photographers, with piles of useful tidbits, tricks and techniques.
*

The Scenario...

My wife Lysa and I recently acquired a new Nikon 35mm SLR camera. It's been more years than I care to think of since either of us took a visual arts course in school, so we felt the best idea would be to go find a book or two that'd bring us back up to speed on how to use the little contraption.

I'll freely admit that Lysa is the more artistic element of our union, and when it comes to things like this I usually just stand back and let her work her magic. True to form, we wandered our separate ways in the bookstore and she came back with this little gem in her hand. I was initially skeptical, based purely on the compact appearance of the handbook (measuring 8" x 5" x 0.5"). It looked more like a video game manual at first glance.

What's Good?

As soon as I opened the handbook, my attitude completely changed. Just standing in line waiting to pay for it I learned a dozen or more factoids that continue to help us make our pictures simply look better. There's an incredible amount of useful tidbits and suggestions, covering nearly every photo situation a person might be faced with.

The book starts out with physical basics: What a camera is, how it works, the differences between SLR (Single Lens Reflex, the kind which you can remove the lenses on) and Compact cameras, the relationships between the amount of light available, aperture size, shutter speed, depth-of-field and so on. It then builds upon those foundations with an examination of appropriate film usage for a general classes of photo situations.

My favorite portions are just beyond the hardware how-it-works sections, moving into suggestions of how to handle specific jobs and overcome common problems. The Tackling Special Projects section contains detailed advice for more than a dozen photographic scenarios (landscapes, portraits, nudes, still life, etc) which have definitely made my shots better, and given me a new appreciation of the work which oft times needs to go into make a truly GOOD picture.

The latter third of the book explores more complex topics and add-on ideas for your camera, specifically flash and lighting usage, buying specific lenses and filters and what they're useful for, and how to round out your camera gear. Most of the information in this area is directed toward SLR camera usage and people aiming at a professional approach to photography.

As an ironic additional bonus, the book size itself is a blessing. It tucks lengthwise into the inner chamber of a standard-size camera bag perfectly, letting us take it wherever we go with the camera. =)

What's Bad?

Only a couple minor annoyances kept this book from being a perfect 10 for me. Although the text within is easy to understand and retain, the layout of the handbook is in a sort of magazine style, with side-bars, picture samples, sub-texts and various other distracting elements. Staying focused on a particular topic can be challenging, as the side-bars are usually filled with yet more interesting factoids that are hard to resist scanning. Similarly, the book seems to shift between single independent pages to where facing pages merge together to make a double-wide 'page', which can also be distracting when you're expecting left-to-right, top-to-bottom text.

Our particular copy also had some misprint glitches (ink obscuring some words, offsets on color pictures that weren't quite on top of each other)... and unless I'm going color blind, there's a couple black and white images associated with discussion about color techniques in the text. Whoops!

So What's In It For Me?

There's a large Aha factor here... that being where you read a section, grok it completely, and exclaim 'Aha!' out loud. You also don't need to be an espresso-sucking, black-jumpsuit-and-beret style artiste in order to enjoy and find this book useful. Even if you're one of the majority of camera owners who pulls it out 4 times a year to snap that obligatory family holiday photo I'd recommend it. Aunt Agnes will have never looked so good.

BEWARE - There's a very good chance that you'll read a section or two of this book and immediately want to run out and try what you've learned. Watch those film and development costs! =)

Buy this book at Amazon.

Table of Contents

  1. Introduction
  2. Cameras
  3. Film
  4. Solving Picture Problems
  5. Tackling Special Projects
  6. Flash
  7. Accessories
  8. Special Effects
  9. Reference Charts
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35mm Handbook

Comments Filter:
  • Kernighan and Pike's latest book. Photograph on...
  • ...for a good digital camera.

    I bought one of the original Canon EOS 650s (I should have spent $100 more and gotten the 620), and I've been waiting ever since to get a good, inexpensive digital SLR with interchangable lenses.

    Film is okay, but it is very limiting. Digital allows the photographer to shoot under a much wider variety of lighting conditions, and there's a lot more that can be done with the color balance and contrast, not to mention retouching after the damage is done.

    Unfortuately, a lot of traditional photographers seem to fear technology, and this has probably set digital photography back a decade or so.

    TedC

  • When the ladies visit your house, a good book may set the mood.

    Here's a tip: Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment doesn't seem to produce the desired results...

  • When the ladies visit your house, a good book may set the mood.
    Here's a tip: Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment doesn't seem to produce the desired results...
    Of course, if it does you'll be the envy of many...
  • Just for your information, there is a section in the handbook dedicated to various specialty scenarios, one of which is nudes.

    Keep in mind that every nude isn't a porno, though most every porno has naked people in it... or at least various fiddly bits exposed =)

    --
    rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)

  • Agreed, he was the grand high boobah of all things photographic, and if you wanted to dive head first and totally immerse yourself in every conceivable use for lenses and shutters then by all means, take a drink from the cup of the master.

    Unfortunately, his collected works will NOT fit inside a camera bag =) This handbook is an excellent primer and reference for the dilletante and/or aspiring professional.

    --
    rickf@transpect.SPAM-B-GONE.net (remove the SPAM-B-GONE bit)

  • I've had a copy of this for years, definitely a good one to have if you are looking to tune your camera techniques.
  • Hey, it's a detailed manual on how to use an open-standards technology, what could be more Slashdotty than that? Anyway, camera people seem super-nerdy to me. And I've been wondering for a while where I could get a book that could teach me how not to take crap photos.
  • As a biker who does a lot of wrenching (3 old Japanese bikes, many poor friends) I could really use a good reference on carbs. Bikes make it more fun, since they generally have 1 carb per cylinder. I therefore have 12 carbs, 3.5 of which work correctly at any one time.

    The frustrating thing about the nerd mindset is that there are so many things to use it on. /. feeds this nicely.

  • I'm hoping this makes a good reference to carry around. The manual for my camera (a Minolta Maxxum XTsi) said enough about the various options and features to make me dangerous, I think. :-) Though I've had decent luck taking pictures (you can see some of them at my web site [sujal.net] under Vacation Pics), I still want to be able to turn off all of the automatic features of my camera and honestly be able to say I understand what's going on.

    I'm close, but I still need something that goes into detail. I went ahead and ordered this book, and I hope it's a help.

    Sujal

  • or at least a long time, I mean like 40+ years. My dad was a photo nut and all his slides from the 40's and 50's are still in great shape, except for one kind (Ectachrome?) w/ organic dyes has a little mildew growth on 'em. I got a pretty cheap scanner to put 'em on a CD rom but the scanned images, tho OK, just couldn't hold a candle to viewing the originals for detail.

    We used to work in a darkroom together w/ B&W stuff, a lot of fun - but home color processing was beyond our reach.

    Chuck
  • I've all but given up on 35mm. On the odd occasion that I need to shoot something I'm not willing to spend time moving in on I'll haul out the Nikon.

    My snapshot camera these days is a 645, and I just got a Canham MQC 5x7. That's right, 35 *square inches* of film. Not to mention the fact tha the MQC is _engineered_.

    If your film comes in a cassette you're probably playing with the wrong format ;) Anyway, you gotta love a hobby where Schiempflug is a real word.

    As for B&W and the comment about DIY, I do my B&W film developing in PMK - an awesome developer. Still using Ilford Multigrade for the paper, but I'm eyeing alternatives. I do my own E6 as well, and I've done a few Ilfochromes (used to be called Cibachrome).

    If you're interesed in a good photo site, http://www.photo.net/photo [photo.net] rules. HP/UX backed by Oracle and AOLServer with TCL/TK.
  • >>When the ladies visit your house, a good book >>may set the mood.

    > Here's a tip: Advanced Programming in the UNIX
    > Environment doesn't seem to produce the
    > desired results...

    Perhaps you need to meet a better class of lady?
  • I use the liquid from the Formulary folks. I really love it especially with Delta 100.
  • In B&W up until I got the 5x7 I was shooting mostly Delta 100. I really love the actuance in PMK. The one time I tried TMX the negatives were too thin in PMK, but it was N+2. I've been meaning to try Microphen, esp. for Delta 3200, but PMK makes me happy. Now I'm shooting 5x7 it's either cutting down 8x10 or switching to Kodak as far as I can tell for T-grain films. I'm going through some HP5+ now, which stains *really* well in PMK and may make the issue moot if it comes out well. Not sure what I'll do in the long-run though.

    I've read lots of good things about XTOL, and it's on my list of 'if I get sick of Pyro' things to try.
  • When I was making 8mm movies, I felt the same way - I thought that no matter how cheap video was, it would never be good enough to meet my quality standards.

    But if you want to get creative on a limited budget, I think video's hard to beat. For one thing, it's how people see most movies nowadays, so your end-result quality may be little different. For another thing, let's face it - enough film to shoot, say, a 90 minute movie at an ultra-cheap shooting ratio would cost more than my entire camera + editing outfit (about $ 10k). That really limits your creative options. Better to make something on video than making nothing at all.

    Believe me, it would be great if things weren't that way - then I'd probably own an Arriflex. But things aren't, and there we are. :-(

    D

    ----
  • Or just get a MiniDV video camera (as I suggested in my other response on this topic). A $ 15.99 MiniDV tape can hold over 100,000 individual still frames, no lie. All in a tiny thing about twice as big as a standard 35mm film cartridge. Use Frame Movie Mode or Progressive Scan (two terms for the same thing) and you'll get gorgeous, perfect stills from any three-chip digital video camcorder.

    D

    DV FAQ [amazing.com]

    ----
  • Just a thought, but maybe the poster was hoping that more web sites would include photos that didn't look like they were taken by my mother (heads chopped off, crappy lighting, etc.).

    \begin{flame}

    Just back off. Some of us might have interests that require being more than arm's reach from a keyboard.

    \end{flame}

  • Ansel Adams. Now there was a guy who was in the ``zone'' his entire career. (OK. Maybe it's a pretty bad photography pun. Couldn't resist it.)

  • Slashdot is about news for nerds, remember?

    Okay, so suppose Linus Torvalds comes to visit you in your wood-paneled office to congratulate you for your port of Linux on a Casio calculator wristwatch. He wants you to take a commemorative portrait of him wearing your wristwatch, and he hands you a camera bag containing the following:

    A Nikon FM2n camera body
    A 24mm f/2.8 lens
    A 50mm f/1.2 lens
    A 85mm f/1.8 lens
    One roll each of ASA 100, 200, 400, and 800 Kodak color print film

    It's a little cloudy outside your window, and Linus has to leave in 5 minutes. What do you do?

    Followup question: Is there any non-nerdy correct response?
  • I think we can conclude from these responses that shutterbugs are among the nerdiest people out there. Note that only one of the replies even tried to stay within the parameters I set! :-) Slashdot should be proud to embrace photographers!

    As for technical... with the above scenario, you need to be able to read a light meter and intelligently select the lens length, film speed, aperture, and shutter speed. Oh, and you have to compose the photograph, too. One person recommended exposure braketing to be on the safe side. Did I leave anything out? I won't even try to get into processing.

    I think that's pretty technical.

    FWIW, I couldn't solve this puzzle myself. I use auto-everything and hope for the best. :-)
  • A real photogeek would never shoot print film. Shoot chromes and give him a Cibachrome. He's worth it.

    Ya shoulda added that the battery was dead in the camera. FM2n's are fully mechanical (cept' for the meter)
  • What kind of film scanner and does it work under Linux? I'm considering buying one fairly soon, but I don't want to pay too much for it (under $1000 for sure).. It's not fair that flatbeds are going for $100 CDN everywhere you look but film scanners are still ridiculous..
  • And besides, wasn't that a review of
    • Goedel, Escher, Bach
    a few weeks back? That lousy book didn't even have info on any kind of technology, much less computers. What's next, intelligent discourse on Dostoevsky? Discussion of Nietzche and Proust? Heaven forbid!

  • Sounds like a good book.

    I thought I share some online resources, I've been using.. I posted a rather obscure question on there q/a about my enlarger and got an answer.

    anyway...

    photo.net is like slashdot but with a camera bend. (check out the archives)

    http://www.photo.net/photo/

    By background picture is:
    http://www.photo.net/photo/pcd1631/chaco-sunset- 7.4.jpg


    Bill Gates deconstruction:

    http://photo.net/philg/humor/bill-gates-fpx.html


    ICP is the international center for photography.

    http://www.icp.org

    My photos (self plug):

    http://members.aol.com/acomjean3/photo.html

    or digitally modified
    http://members.aol.com/acomjean2
    or
    http://members.aol.com/acomjean2/tomfu4.jpg

    check em out.
  • I've been using a fairly good flatbed scanner for years but just bought a film scanner and I'm amazed at how much better the results are. I also have a rather good digital camera (Olympus D-600L) and use it a lot, but still much prefer my Nikon SLRs. Until someone makes a multi-megapixel digital SLR with interchangeable lenses that costs less than a decent car, film is still best, at least for me. And quality lenses are what matters most. I don't understand why so many people put cheapy, off-brand zooms on good cameras.
  • I really dislike 35mm. I'd like to see a book covering Polaroid Land Camera tips. One of the tips would have to be how to rewire the camera to accept AA batteries.
  • Hey, there is a detailed discussion in that book on how to build a record player that can duplicate any sound (even one that would destroy the record player).

    That's some serious technology. :)

    Also, I think there's a big potential market for computers composed of ant colonies (a la Terry Pratchett's "Hex" ("Anthill Inside" boo bee boo boop!))

    In all seriousness, I would love to see more articles on pure science, photography, music, SF and cooking. These are all technical fields that seem to have a lot of overlap with hacking.

    Rick
  • > Film is okay, but it is very limiting. Digital allows the photographer
    >to shoot under a much wider variety of lighting conditions, and there's
    >a lot more that can be done with the color balance and contrast, not to
    >mention retouching after the damage is done.

    Digital camera CCDs are themselves quite limiting (and in other aspects just different than film), though not as bad as older camcorder CCDs. I am not sure of all the interesting effects that CCDs can introduce into a picture's colour/clarity/etc mix, but there are a few. Colour bleeding is quite a problem with many CCDs, as is even saturation between all colours.

    Digital video (or probably video compression), as well, results in a different motion-picture experience than film does...watch panned shots especially. Not a bad thing, but different.

    Digital technology is not bad, neither is film. In the artistic sense, their differences are quite useful.

  • There were four books altogether:
    The Camera
    The Negative
    The Print

    (and believe it or not) The Polaroid
    I *think* that's right. The Polaroid is now long out of print, and probably rightly so since it dealt with specific materials (as is my understanding) and would at this point be pretty out of date. The first three are a wonderful and still timely reference (now 20 years after Adams' death!) although I don't think they make a great choice for the less-experienced crowd. The negative in particular will be of less use to 35mm photographers, as it deals with selective development that has little place in roll film applications.
    Anyhow. I always *did* think that Upton & London's Photography was overkill for beginners, it's good to see a quicker reference receiveing rave reviews.
  • Though I haven't read it yet, this book looks like a far better value than "Photography", a fairly common textbook used for Intro to Photog. courses. US$60 and very light on the meat. Glad my money went to Amazon.com where I hold shares and not the Barnes and Noble Juggernaut.
  • Have you ever tried to take a nice, solid, properly exposed photograph of a computer screen? Let me assure you, as someone with hundreds of kodachrome slides of my early computer art, it can get kinda technical! ;)
  • One obvious area where film has digital photography beat is in scaling. This works in more than one way. If you need to shoot a lot of pictures (big wedding, vacation, whatever) you just buy lots of film. 40 rolls of film cost just 40 times more than 1 roll, or probably less. If you want to shoot lots of digital pictures you'll need to start off-loading them from the camera, and this means dragging a laptop and a pack of CDR drives or something to pile all the stuff onto, or buying lots of expensive PC cards and downloading pictures after the fact. Anyway you do it, it's a hassle and probably a lot of weight to lug around. Your 40 packs of film probably weigh 1/10 what you're facing with digital photography.

    Also, film scales better in the resolution sense. If 35mm resolution doesn't cut it you have lots of options. The best pro market digital cameras still have a long way to go before they'll match big view cameras (8"x10" or bigger sheets of film).
  • IMHO video doesn't hold a candle to motion picture film (even super 8). I can almost understand the money aspect in this situation... but I guess I do hold a strong bias in this area, and also how the motion picture industry is completely hooked on avid and how nobody actually 'cuts' film anymore... I think it's quite fun... but I guess if you are working on the latest blockbuster it feels more like a job than fun... oh well...
    I guess the main difference I see between digital stills and high quality video is that in a digital still you can mess it up more easily so it conveys a different look/feel than with digital video. It could also be how I associate film with movies, digital stills with computer gfx, and video with TV. I don't own a TV for many reasons, and lack of money is not one of them...
  • Posted by The Very Evil Doctor Finkleste:

    I still love film. Yeah, I got a 1 MPixel digital camera and the instant turnaround is great, but compare it to a well exposed slide or negative and it's a joke.

    Also, compare the cost of getting a decent film scanner and even a used SLR with a couple of lenses with a comparable 4 - 6 MPixel camera (which you need to do quality graphics with). You wallet will quickly agree that film still has it's place for the next couple of years.

    One other nice thing about film : you don't need batteries to view it.

    As an aside for people doing home-brew web sites, the common mistake people make is to scan the print instead of the source negative or slide. The dynamic range of the print is WAY lower than the original and that's why most scanned pictures suck.
  • That's just about exactly right. With consumer grade film shot with mid to upper level consumer equipment will give you about 1800x1200 resolution. Even drum scanning any higher, you'll just scan blur. Sometimes, on some film scanners, you'll get a better image by scanning at twice that, and reducing it in software, particularly on inexpensive scanners where you may get more noise in the darks.

    Good professional-grade film, and higher-end fixed-length lenses can give results that hold up to 2400dpi scanning, or about twice that. (3600x2400 or so)

    You need a *very* good lens, *very* good film, and a rock-solid tripod to get an image that sharp. Its usually not necessary, unless you're trying to print a sharp 11x14 image from a 35mm shot.

    The "lines per millimeter" reading is the most lines per millimeter you can have and still discern them as separate lines. So you've effectively got almost twice that resolution, 50 LPM is able to store 100LPM of information, alternating light and dark. (In practical terms its often less than that, because the tests rarely expect full dark and full light across the range, so even 50% more detail than the LPM number indicates can still give that amount of resolution)

    One thing most people miss about digital cameras is that the resolution is *really* 1/3 what they're thinking it is.

    A 1600x1200 shot is actually 533x1200 full color, since they tell you the number of sensors on the chip, and don't tell you about the RGB mask in front of it.

    That's why you often get wierd edges in high contrast areas in a digital camera image.

    I use digital shots for stuff that's going online. Anything more and I'll do a 1200 or 2400 dpi scan, depending on how I shot the image (and if I have that kind of resoltion).

  • Ah, carberation is a science, and art, and it is quite the style even in these days of fuel injection. I once had a shelf with carbs liberated from the local yard: a two barrel, a few quadrajets, and a Holley. Since intakes were bolt on projects done in less than an hour, I had a shelf for them too.

    For the single plane intake, I had a nitrous plate for times when enough was just not enough. I could experiment with different valving, air flow designs, and timing. Each new configuration and adjustment gave a different feel in the seat of your pants. Passengers really felt the difference too. A few white faces in the passenger side would indicate to me this is not a boring sport!

    Carberators can be tuned and optimized for different conditions, such as fuel economy, different climates, seasons, autocross racing, drag racing, streetability, and for pulling torque. Its an art that can be useful and earn you some cash and respect in those teen years.
  • There's nothing wrong with nudes. Its a fine artform that is appreciated by many. Nude photography, if you have ever tried it, may be more involved^H^H^H^H^H^H^Hcomplicated than you think. Since we are dealing with images of the human body, expressions and a slight change of posture can really change the whole meaning. Contrast and color have a dominant impact on what you are attempting to convey. Backgrounds and lighting are very important.

    Nude photography is not limited to pornography. Many private couples have done such in the privacy of their own homes. I would say there are magnitudes more private collections of this art than the commercial smut that is spammed in your mailbox.

    Its fun and rewarding for those involved. Its a shame that people associate this art into porn.
  • Now, I agree that the 35mm camera is hard to beat when it comes to getting the highest possible quality pictures, but unfortunately getting them into the computer is a pain, and paying for film and developing is an even bigger pain.

    About a year ago, I took a look at what was out there in digital cameras, and - like you - didn't think much of what I saw. I didn't need high resolution, since all the pictures I take are bound for the web, but I wanted something with closer to the look and feel of a "real" camera.

    In the end, I bought a Canon XL1 MiniDV camcorder. It's a bit heavy to carry around (I put it around my neck like a giant still camera), but it takes fantastic pictures and draws attention like a magnet. It's very similar in operation to the Canon EOS still camera I own, so the learning curve was very gentle. And it has a real lens and camera-like manual controls that are very easy to use compared to the clunky menu systems of most digital and video cameras. It has interchangeable lenses, but the included lens is roughly equivalent to 28-500mm in 35mm context, so you probably won't need the insanely expensive other lenses.

    It's a 3CCD camcorder, which means it uses imaging technology more advanced than any plain digital camera I know of.

    Needless to say, I recommend it highly. Unfortunately, the $4,000-odd price puts it above the reach of most people; a good alternative is the Sony TRV-900, also a three-chip unit, for about $ 2,300.

    For more information, check out my DV FAQ [amazing.com] or take a look at some XL1 pictures I took [amazing.com]

    D

    ----

  • The Canon XL1 is certainly a nice unit - my only fear is that MiniDV is going to be replaced by something better in a couple years. And the firewire port solve the digitzation problem.

    Since I don't really need a video camera, I'm sitting back to see how this whole digital TV thing shakes out. In DV's favor, apparently Sony is going to use firewire as the interconnect between all of their home theater components in the future.
    --

  • You could hit Linus over the head and steal his photography equipment.
    --
  • How to rebuild a carburator would be welcome on /., as far as I'm concerned.

    There is much more to news for nerds than computer-industry news.

    Photography, much like music, has a common root with hackerdom. It's about making art out of a medium. It's about patterns and creating something beautifully unconventional, using conventional tools.

    Including articles like this one on /. is great!
    It serves to broaden perspectives of people who appreciate the exercise. It just might scratch someone's itch.

    For the sheep, there is ZDNN.com.
  • No info on carbs, but...

    Several years ago, Bruce Sterling wrote a great cyberpunk novel titled _Heavy_Weather_. The book was about the near future weather effect of human industrialization. He described a new dust bowl, F-5 tornados being the norm and not the exception, etc. He had the 'flying cow' before Twister was even a glimmer in Spielberg's eye. The protagonists in the book were a group of storm chasers.

    Anyway, the point of this note: In the book, Sterling extended the definition of 'hacking' to encompass that which a person did well and for the sake of doing alone. The leader of the Storm Troupers was a Ph.D. in meteorology (methinks) and 'hacked weather', his estranged brother - a politician/public relations type - 'hacked society'... A person is a hacker of that in which they are a self-made expert (in relative terms of course).

    Sterling's definition of hacking seems to really suit the Slashdotters well. We have here people who hack code, hack photography, hack carburators. We have people who hack people (i.e. social engineering) hack genes, hack quantum physics...

    I hope this note doesn't get lost in the shuffle, because, IMO, Sterling's definition is one we can be proud of.
  • Photography, at the level that this book appears to cover, is a very technical field. Even though it's been at least a decade since I've used a camera that didn't have a better understanding of how to operate itself than I do, I know how complex taking a professional-quality photograph can be.

    So, what other non-computing topics is Slashdot not allowed to cover? Engineering? Physics? Biotechnology?

  • If you really want an excellent book on cameras and photography, including developing and printing, check out the series by Ansel Adams. It's four or five books I think. They are called 'The Camera', 'The Negative', 'The Print', 'Natural Light Photography' and 'Artificial Light Photography'. He talks mostly about black and white photography, especially in the book called 'The Print' which is all to do with making your own prints from negatives. However, many of the other techniques are very relevant to colour work also.

    Now, this guy REALLY knows the science of photography.

    Check it out!
  • I just got myself a digital camera... and it kicks ass!!! Glass lens, 1600x1200, works with linux, and best of all even though it would appear to be @ least half-automatic always, you can kind of use root permissions to make it do what you want. And that doesn't include a soldering iron... :) I'm a real manual-nut, I've been using an old Pentax K-1000 (gotta love the hand crank...) and plan to keep using it, but usually I stare @ my puter so much that I generally scan shit or project, I'm not a big print person. Not only can I get wonderful instant 1600x1200 gratification, but I can also use my digicam as an 850 dollar light meter for my Pentax ;P Of course the digicam still has the same flaws you'd expect in any ccd camera, so I would advise against taking picutes of zebras, etc. No I never plan to abandon film, when I get rich I'll start being a film biggot again, but when you shoot as much film as I like to shoot you better get a second job or start eating nothing but Ramen...
    (P.S.- If anybody cares I got a Nikon 950, lists for 1k, sells for like 800, got it cuz it will do long exposures/hi-res mostly, cheers)
  • by dattaway ( 3088 ) on Wednesday June 09, 1999 @07:50AM (#1858745) Homepage Journal
    You might be new around here. Its a fine tradition to recommend good reading material in these parts. Some people prefer information on dead trees. Someone once said it best, "Ah, the joys of reading at the throne." Also, its not rude to take a book to bed, but bring the laptop and you could be in the doghouse for the evening!

    Dead trees require no expensive batteries, work well outside in the shade, pass easily through airport security, and are always in style. They are status symbols. Do you have a well stocked bookshelf? When the ladies visit your house, a good book may set the mood. One good book is never enough. Don't get caught without diversity in reading material. Get a book today!
  • by IntlHarvester ( 11985 ) on Wednesday June 09, 1999 @07:34AM (#1858746) Journal

    It's good to see that 35mm film could be still considered "news for nerds". In my opinon, film is still much more geeky than digital photography.

    Plus, it always gets me when I see a friend with a $500 digital camera that has a crappy plastic lens that looks like it fell out of a box of cracker jacks and picture quality worse than your average 110 camera.

    For instant pictures, there's always the Polaroid Instant Slide Processor - usually about $20 on ebay.
    --

The rule on staying alive as a program manager is to give 'em a number or give 'em a date, but never give 'em both at once.

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