I got an invitation this morning to see an online seminar on focusing when using the newer OMD cameras including the E-M5III I used for the photos in this post. There is a lot I like about the OMD E-M5III, the four-thirds format, the small size, and weatherproofing that make it ideal for hiking, and the fully articulated LCD, but what drives me nuts on all Olympus (now just OMD) cameras are the digital menus. They are way too complicated.
I 'grew up' on 35mm and 4x5 press/view cameras. A lot of photographers complained about the complexities of camera movements but those were peanuts compared to today's computerized cameras IMO. The guy presenting the seminar went through all the menus and submenus that control how the camera autofocuses in rapid fire. There are lots of them and he was a fast talker, so much so that some of the commenters asked him to "Slow down". They were having trouble keeping up with his rapid-fire delivery at the same time they were trying to follow along with their own cameras as he had suggested they do. I got so lost I gave up.
He told how to set the focusing target for different situations, how to move using dials and buttons, how to change the function of the dials and buttons to do different things, and how to reset them to the defaults. I found myself longing for the days when a shutter release was a shutter release, the aperture ring was the aperture ring, a focusing ring/knob was a focusing knob, and I wondered why anyone would want to switch them around. To me, using your camera should be an intuitive act with practice. Switching the controls around just complicates your process so that you have to spend more time thinking about 'how' to get the photo and detracting from your attention to what you are photographing.
Okay, I get it. I'm an old guy, the modern world is complicated and I am really trying to understand the bazillion (exaggeration) settings on my camera but the main menu has 6 items and the submenus go from A to J. I should also mention that there are 4 "A"s, 2 "C"s, 4 "D's, and 3 "E"s. Each of those has a sub-submenu of 5-8 settings you can choose from with at least on/off but many have 3-5 choices.
My strategy is to set up a camera to do what I want it to do in the simplest way and leave it there. Which means I have to understand all this just once. I have a manual on Kindle but I'm not fond of ebooks for technical information. They are great for books that you read from beginning to end but if you have to flip around a lot, "see section 5 of chapter 4 for how to reset..". All this is to say I wish I could get tabbed hard copy manuals for digital cameras. Several decades ago I had a friend who was a professor of writing and he claimed that the biggest need was for technical writers, people who could explain things in simple terms that the average person could understand. Our increasingly complex technology has made that need even more urgent and I don't see that need being filled.
Like you Jim, I generally set my cameras to the positions I use for most things. I don't believe I've ever taken a photo in the Program mode on any of my cameras! Mostly, it's aperture priority and go for it.
ReplyDeleteThe reason I got so deep in the menus was the focusing system. I was trying to photograph birds that I hoped would land in a particular place with other stuff around that spot that could confuse autofocus. WAY BACK in film days you turned the focusing ring on the lens and if you wanted to 'lock' the focus, you just left it there. Simple. OMD has a half-press hybrid focus system that autofocuses on a target area of a size and position that you set then allows you to adjust the focus to precisely where you want it using the focusing ring and "focus peaking" (colored outlines around the things that are in focus) then lock it separately so that when you trip the shutter it doesn't re-autofocus. While my aging eyes appreciate autofocus, there are times when I long for the simplicity of true manual focus. The focus-peeking is nice though. I don't know why they couldn't just combine that with full manual focusing.
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