RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-15 Thread Tanya Love


Thanks for this Bill.  The compact design is a key thing for me, and one of
the reasons that I love the *istD so much.
Me, being a girl and all, with my small hands and weak wrists, when I have
it loaded up with flash gun, an heavy lens
And battery grip, I need to be sure that I can actually hold the thing
steady enough to get a sharp pic.  I have it pretty much
down pat with the *istD (and so I should after shooting with it for so
long!), that even when fully loaded up I can get a 
very usable image shooting right down to 1/16 these days, and as I
particularly like to shoot with available light whenever I 
can, I am really excited about the prospects that the in-body image
stabilisation might give me.

Battery life is another issue, some of you from GFM when I came might
remember the ludicrous amounts of batteries that I go through, 
which for some reason has always been about double everyone else, even when
I am not using the instant review on my camera
or flash.

The increased FPS rate and buffer size will be a dream too!

Can't wait to get my hands on this baby!

Tan.x.

- Original Message - 
From: Tanya Love
Subject: RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)




 How many of you have K20s/K7s and do you think the cost is worth the
 improvements of the latter over the former?


I do.
Aside from the more compact chassis, which I like, the metering accuracy has

been improved from practically useless on the K20 to extremely accurate on 
the K7.
AF speed is nominally faster, but for me the big improvement is a side 
benefit of the 2FPS speed boost.
The camera is just way more responsive.
Battery life has been hugely improved as well.
I no longer feel the need to chimp every shot to check the metering, and I 
am getting anywhere from 1200 to 1600 exposures per battery.
I'm not one of the people who has noticed an improvement in noise 
performance, but my photography doesn't take me into high ISO land, so it 
isn't surprising.
If you get a K-7, install at the very least, the first firmware release, as 
it fixes a broken AF point selection problem which Pentax inexplicably let 
out of the factory.

William Robb


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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-10 Thread AlunFoto
2010/1/10 Tanya Love tanyal...@bigpond.com:
 How many of you have K20s/K7s and do you think the cost is worth the
 improvements of the latter over the former?

That depends on your usage.
I much treasure the functions beefed up; AF speed, multisegment light
metering and fps. But then again I'm probably now the tailgunner mr.
Robb mentioned prophetically last year.
If you don't need those functions, the only lure of K-7 is some
improvements in image quality. The noise floor may be ever so slightly
lower, I doubt the measurbators are able to quantify it properly. It
might as well be caused by the improved light metering. The K-7 tends
to put the to of the histogram hump further to the right than do K20D.
There's still a lot of leeway for picking down the highlights, though,
so the net effect is that the noise floor seems to be lower.

Jostein

-- 
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http://alunfoto.blogspot.com

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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-10 Thread P N Stenquist


On Jan 10, 2010, at 7:57 AM, AlunFoto wrote:


2010/1/10 Tanya Love tanyal...@bigpond.com:

How many of you have K20s/K7s and do you think the cost is worth the
improvements of the latter over the former?


That depends on your usage.
I much treasure the functions beefed up; AF speed, multisegment light
metering and fps. But then again I'm probably now the tailgunner mr.
Robb mentioned prophetically last year.
If you don't need those functions, the only lure of K-7 is some
improvements in image quality. The noise floor may be ever so slightly
lower, I doubt the measurbators are able to quantify it properly. It
might as well be caused by the improved light metering. The K-7 tends
to put the to of the histogram hump further to the right than do K20D.
There's still a lot of leeway for picking down the highlights, though,
so the net effect is that the noise floor seems to be lower.

That's completely in synch with my observations. I end up with less  
noise than I did with the K20D, but it's probably more a function of  
the camera's accuracy than sensor and processor performance.

Paul


Jostein

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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-10 Thread William Robb


- Original Message - 
From: Tanya Love

Subject: RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)





How many of you have K20s/K7s and do you think the cost is worth the
improvements of the latter over the former?



I do.
Aside from the more compact chassis, which I like, the metering accuracy has 
been improved from practically useless on the K20 to extremely accurate on 
the K7.
AF speed is nominally faster, but for me the big improvement is a side 
benefit of the 2FPS speed boost.

The camera is just way more responsive.
Battery life has been hugely improved as well.
I no longer feel the need to chimp every shot to check the metering, and I 
am getting anywhere from 1200 to 1600 exposures per battery.
I'm not one of the people who has noticed an improvement in noise 
performance, but my photography doesn't take me into high ISO land, so it 
isn't surprising.
If you get a K-7, install at the very least, the first firmware release, as 
it fixes a broken AF point selection problem which Pentax inexplicably let 
out of the factory.


William Robb


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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-10 Thread Ken Waller

Welcome back Tanya

I wouldn't discount the K20D, since you'd be upgrading from the starkist! 
The K20D would be a major leap forward and you can get it for less money 
than the K7.


Kenneth Waller
http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f

- Original Message - 
From: Tanya Love tanyal...@bigpond.com

Subject: RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)


Thanks Paul!  I figured as such with the video - not needing it, but 
there
has certainly been times, mainly on a personal level with my kids etc, 
when
I've been out with them, camera over my shoulder and I've thought to 
myself,

oh, if only the *istD had a video capability when they've done something
particularly cute.  Plus the HD aspect and HDMI input is certainly
attractive.

With the Live Preview, I am the same, never having had one with the *istD
and that being the ONLY camera I have shot with in oh, about 6 years now! 
I

don't see myself ever using it, as like I said, it is a battery sucker,
rather than anything else, especially with the viewfinder having 100%
coverage on the K-7.  I just mainly wondered if anyone else had found that
it has an application that I hadn't already thought of that was
disadvantaged by it's slowness on that point.

Tan. :)

Paul wrote:

The video capability is nice, but it requires manual focus. However, 
that's
not too much of a problem when using wide lenses in relatively good light. 
I

bought a hood with diopter adjustment for the live view screen. That makes
manual focus fairly easy, even when moving. I think the HD video 
capability

in combination with the excellent lenses would be useful for serious
applications. I've been thinking about trying to shoot a demo 30-second
commercial with it. For kid's birthdays and stuff like that, my Sony video
camera is a better choice.

I never use live preview mode and rarely shoot in live view, so I can't
offer any input there. I have used live view occasionally for framing in
situations where I couldn't get to the viewfinder, and I found it useful.
But I prefocused.
Paul



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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-10 Thread Rick Womer
Heck, even a K10D is a huge improvement on the istD, and they can be had for 
very little money.

http://photo.net/photos/RickW


--- On Sun, 1/10/10, Ken Waller kwal...@peoplepc.com wrote:

 I wouldn't discount the K20D, since you'd be upgrading from
 the starkist! The K20D would be a major leap forward and you
 can get it for less money than the K7.
 
 Kenneth Waller
 http://www.tinyurl.com/272u2f
 
 - Original Message - From: Tanya Love tanyal...@bigpond.com
 Subject: RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in
 the house!)
 
 
  Thanks Paul!  I figured as such with the video -
 not needing it, but there
  has certainly been times, mainly on a personal level
 with my kids etc, when
  I've been out with them, camera over my shoulder and
 I've thought to myself,
  oh, if only the *istD had a video capability when
 they've done something
  particularly cute.  Plus the HD aspect and HDMI
 input is certainly
  attractive.
  
  With the Live Preview, I am the same, never having had
 one with the *istD
  and that being the ONLY camera I have shot with in oh,
 about 6 years now! I
  don't see myself ever using it, as like I said, it is
 a battery sucker,
  rather than anything else, especially with the
 viewfinder having 100%
  coverage on the K-7.  I just mainly wondered if
 anyone else had found that
  it has an application that I hadn't already thought of
 that was
  disadvantaged by it's slowness on that point.
  
  Tan. :)
  
  Paul wrote:
  
  The video capability is nice, but it requires manual
 focus. However, that's
  not too much of a problem when using wide lenses in
 relatively good light. I
  bought a hood with diopter adjustment for the live
 view screen. That makes
  manual focus fairly easy, even when moving. I think
 the HD video capability
  in combination with the excellent lenses would be
 useful for serious
  applications. I've been thinking about trying to shoot
 a demo 30-second
  commercial with it. For kid's birthdays and stuff like
 that, my Sony video
  camera is a better choice.
  
  I never use live preview mode and rarely shoot in live
 view, so I can't
  offer any input there. I have used live view
 occasionally for framing in
  situations where I couldn't get to the viewfinder, and
 I found it useful.
  But I prefocused.
  Paul
 
 
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A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread P N Stenquist


On Jan 9, 2010, at 8:04 AM, Tanya Love wrote:


Har!

Nope, we didn't make the bicycle trip - got busy having more babies  
instead!
Added two more to the tribe since I was last on the list, so that  
makes five

now...

Oh, and I remarried too - hence the name Tanya LOVE - that is my  
real

name, and we aptly call our home the LoveShack! lol.

Last year was a really crappy, crappy year from us, we have a new  
business,
Ankle Biters, an online and physical store with eco/organic products  
for
kids and babies and we managed to get ourselves ripped off to the  
tune of
$42k.  LONG story, but basically, we are broke and 2009 sucked  
majorly, but
we have themed 2010 as our year of recovery so that the annus  
horribulus

(sic) that was 2009 can go take a hike!

Oh yeah, did anyone know that I retired from photography?  That  
was back

in late 2006, when I popped out baby #4, Zali.

Well, it seems that fate has other plans, and now I'm back at it  
again.  No
more weddings for me though, in my last year as a wedding photog. I  
dealt

with about
79 Bridezillas, and that was enough to scare me off for life!

Now, it's commercial photography all the way baby!  Hehe.  Still  
kids and
babies (someone would think I was clucky or something!) but kids and  
babies

PRODUCT
Photography is my calling for now.

I rejoined cause I was hanging out to know which of you rich old  
farts have
got yourselves a K-7?? Me thinks me needs one  Oh, did I mention  
that I

am STILL using my
Trusty old starkist?!?  I think I've clocked the speedo about 10  
times now,
just clicked over another 10k the other day.  It has a crack in the  
preview

screen from one too
many dives on the bitumen, but apart from that, she's still going  
strong!


So, where is the cheapest place to get my hands on a K-7 at  
present?  And
what is the general consensus on it in comparison with the K20D?  I  
am sure
that this has been discussed to death a gazillion times over but I'm  
too
lazy to go through all the archives, jeez you guys can talk!  The  
K20D is
going for aud$899 at Ted's Camera House here in BrisVegas right now,  
which
looks the best deal I've found so far, so do you think it would be  
worth the
extra $500 for the K7?   Me being me and as hard as I am on my gear  
and all,
was thinking that the weather proofing of the K7 might be a good  
little

insurance policy to have...

So, what have I missed?  Just checked out the 2008 Photobook and I  
see that
you guys STILL haven't gotten over your fixation for bloody  
cormorants and

hmmm, Grandfather Mountain!  Some familiar scenes there!



Hi Tanya,
I've been shooting with  K7 for almost six months now, and I've  
clocked 9950 exposures. I love it. The K20D was nice, but the K7 is a  
major improvement. First on my list of pluses would be far better  
exposure metering. It's very accurate and delivers repeatable results  
-- something my K20D could never quite achieve. The autofocus is  
noticeably faster, particularly on moving objects. That's also a huge  
plus for me. And the increased frame rate is a big help for a lot of  
what I shoot: moving vehicles, sports, etc. With that comes faster  
write speed, which cuts down on waiting until mr. camera is ready to  
work. Heck, I can't remember ever having to wait with the K7. With the  
K20D, when I shot a series of autobracket exposures, I'd stand there  
waiting for the ready light to come back on. The battery life is much  
better. Even without the grip you can get around 1000 RAW exposures. I  
have a grip installed and always shoot with two batteries. I've never  
come close to exhausting them, even in a long day of continuous  
shooting. Finally, the build quality is superb. The camera is a little  
tank.

Paul



Tan.x.

-Original Message-
From: pdml-boun...@pdml.net [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf  
Of Mark

Roberts
Sent: Saturday, 9 January 2010 10:27 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: Fairygirl is in the house!

Tanya @ Ankle Biters wrote:


Hey there PDML'ers!!

Anyone remember me?

Cotty, I see you're still around, making the place smell bad...  
hehehe...


Tan, you're back! Have you only just finished bicycling around  
Australia?



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RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread Tanya Love
Awesome!  That is just the stuff I wanted to hear!

I've read that the AF is REALLY slow during the Live Preview mode, how have
you found it?  Not that it's a big issue for me as I haven't EVER
had a camera with LP and it is just another battery sucking thing anyways...

I am excited at the prospect of having rechargeable batteries!  My
conscience is really starting to get to me when I stop to consider just how
many
AAs I have thrown out over the years.  I do have rechargeables, but never
can seem to find the charger when I need it!

Any feedback on the video capabilities?

-Original Message-
From: pdml-boun...@pdml.net [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of P N
Stenquist
Sent: Sunday, 10 January 2010 1:11 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)


Hi Tanya,
I've been shooting with  K7 for almost six months now, and I've clocked 9950
exposures. I love it. The K20D was nice, but the K7 is a major improvement.
First on my list of pluses would be far better exposure metering. It's very
accurate and delivers repeatable results
-- something my K20D could never quite achieve. The autofocus is noticeably
faster, particularly on moving objects. That's also a huge plus for me. And
the increased frame rate is a big help for a lot of what I shoot: moving
vehicles, sports, etc. With that comes faster write speed, which cuts down
on waiting until mr. camera is ready to work. Heck, I can't remember ever
having to wait with the K7. With the K20D, when I shot a series of
autobracket exposures, I'd stand there waiting for the ready light to come
back on. The battery life is much better. Even without the grip you can get
around 1000 RAW exposures. I have a grip installed and always shoot with two
batteries. I've never come close to exhausting them, even in a long day of
continuous shooting. Finally, the build quality is superb. The camera is a
little tank.
Paul



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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread P N Stenquist


On Jan 9, 2010, at 10:46 AM, Tanya Love wrote:


Awesome!  That is just the stuff I wanted to hear!

I've read that the AF is REALLY slow during the Live Preview mode,  
how have

you found it?  Not that it's a big issue for me as I haven't EVER
had a camera with LP and it is just another battery sucking thing  
anyways...


I am excited at the prospect of having rechargeable batteries!  My
conscience is really starting to get to me when I stop to consider  
just how

many
AAs I have thrown out over the years.  I do have rechargeables, but  
never

can seem to find the charger when I need it!

Any feedback on the video capabilities?

The video capability is nice, but it requires manual focus. However,  
that's not too much of a problem when using wide lenses in relatively  
good light. I bought a hood with diopter adjustment for the live view  
screen. That makes manual focus fairly easy, even when moving. I think  
the HD video capability in combination with the excellent lenses would  
be useful for serious applications. I've been thinking about trying to  
shoot a demo 30-second commercial with it. For kid's birthdays and  
stuff like that, my Sony video camera is a better choice.


I never use live preview mode and rarely shoot in live view, so I  
can't offer any input there. I have used live view occasionally for  
framing in situations where I couldn't get to the viewfinder, and I  
found it useful. But I prefocused.

Paul


-Original Message-
From: pdml-boun...@pdml.net [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf  
Of P N

Stenquist
Sent: Sunday, 10 January 2010 1:11 AM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)


Hi Tanya,
I've been shooting with  K7 for almost six months now, and I've  
clocked 9950
exposures. I love it. The K20D was nice, but the K7 is a major  
improvement.
First on my list of pluses would be far better exposure metering.  
It's very

accurate and delivers repeatable results
-- something my K20D could never quite achieve. The autofocus is  
noticeably
faster, particularly on moving objects. That's also a huge plus for  
me. And
the increased frame rate is a big help for a lot of what I shoot:  
moving
vehicles, sports, etc. With that comes faster write speed, which  
cuts down
on waiting until mr. camera is ready to work. Heck, I can't remember  
ever

having to wait with the K7. With the K20D, when I shot a series of
autobracket exposures, I'd stand there waiting for the ready light  
to come
back on. The battery life is much better. Even without the grip you  
can get
around 1000 RAW exposures. I have a grip installed and always shoot  
with two
batteries. I've never come close to exhausting them, even in a long  
day of
continuous shooting. Finally, the build quality is superb. The  
camera is a

little tank.
Paul



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Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread Bob Sullivan
Hi Tanya,

To add to Paul's excellent review of the K-7...
I've had one for the last 6 months and run up 2,750+ exposures.
The size is a bit more compact than the K-20, but still bigger than the *ist DS.
The user interface is superb, no more digging thru menus.  It's all on the back.
It is a truely modern and up-to-date use of the lcd screen to convey info.
Autofocus seems faster and is really fast  silent with the new
internal lens drives.
Battery life has changed.  The K20 said I'm 1/2 full, no wait, I'm DEAD!
The K-7 posts 2/3rds full and keeps shooting until I'm back home for a recharge.
And a spare battery cost me US$10, much cheaper than the K20 or K10.
I've tried the video here and there. Get a fast card  focusing is a
user job.  :-(

Nice to hear from you again.
Seems like wedding and kid photos were a good source of income for you.
And your kid photos were really good, so I hope you continue.

Regards,  Bob S.


On Sat, Jan 9, 2010 at 9:11 AM, P N Stenquist pnstenqu...@comcast.net wrote:

 On Jan 9, 2010, at 8:04 AM, Tanya Love wrote:

 Har!

 Nope, we didn't make the bicycle trip - got busy having more babies
 instead!
 Added two more to the tribe since I was last on the list, so that makes
 five
 now...

 Oh, and I remarried too - hence the name Tanya LOVE - that is my real
 name, and we aptly call our home the LoveShack! lol.

 Last year was a really crappy, crappy year from us, we have a new
 business,
 Ankle Biters, an online and physical store with eco/organic products for
 kids and babies and we managed to get ourselves ripped off to the tune of
 $42k.  LONG story, but basically, we are broke and 2009 sucked majorly,
 but
 we have themed 2010 as our year of recovery so that the annus horribulus
 (sic) that was 2009 can go take a hike!

 Oh yeah, did anyone know that I retired from photography?  That was back
 in late 2006, when I popped out baby #4, Zali.

 Well, it seems that fate has other plans, and now I'm back at it again.
  No
 more weddings for me though, in my last year as a wedding photog. I dealt
 with about
 79 Bridezillas, and that was enough to scare me off for life!

 Now, it's commercial photography all the way baby!  Hehe.  Still kids and
 babies (someone would think I was clucky or something!) but kids and
 babies
 PRODUCT
 Photography is my calling for now.

 I rejoined cause I was hanging out to know which of you rich old farts
 have
 got yourselves a K-7?? Me thinks me needs one  Oh, did I mention that
 I
 am STILL using my
 Trusty old starkist?!?  I think I've clocked the speedo about 10 times
 now,
 just clicked over another 10k the other day.  It has a crack in the
 preview
 screen from one too
 many dives on the bitumen, but apart from that, she's still going strong!

 So, where is the cheapest place to get my hands on a K-7 at present?  And
 what is the general consensus on it in comparison with the K20D?  I am
 sure
 that this has been discussed to death a gazillion times over but I'm too
 lazy to go through all the archives, jeez you guys can talk!  The K20D is
 going for aud$899 at Ted's Camera House here in BrisVegas right now, which
 looks the best deal I've found so far, so do you think it would be worth
 the
 extra $500 for the K7?   Me being me and as hard as I am on my gear and
 all,
 was thinking that the weather proofing of the K7 might be a good little
 insurance policy to have...

 So, what have I missed?  Just checked out the 2008 Photobook and I see
 that
 you guys STILL haven't gotten over your fixation for bloody cormorants and
 hmmm, Grandfather Mountain!  Some familiar scenes there!


 Hi Tanya,
 I've been shooting with  K7 for almost six months now, and I've clocked 9950
 exposures. I love it. The K20D was nice, but the K7 is a major improvement.
 First on my list of pluses would be far better exposure metering. It's very
 accurate and delivers repeatable results -- something my K20D could never
 quite achieve. The autofocus is noticeably faster, particularly on moving
 objects. That's also a huge plus for me. And the increased frame rate is a
 big help for a lot of what I shoot: moving vehicles, sports, etc. With that
 comes faster write speed, which cuts down on waiting until mr. camera is
 ready to work. Heck, I can't remember ever having to wait with the K7. With
 the K20D, when I shot a series of autobracket exposures, I'd stand there
 waiting for the ready light to come back on. The battery life is much
 better. Even without the grip you can get around 1000 RAW exposures. I have
 a grip installed and always shoot with two batteries. I've never come close
 to exhausting them, even in a long day of continuous shooting. Finally, the
 build quality is superb. The camera is a little tank.
 Paul


 Tan.x.

 -Original Message-
 From: pdml-boun...@pdml.net [mailto:pdml-boun...@pdml.net] On Behalf Of
 Mark
 Roberts
 Sent: Saturday, 9 January 2010 10:27 PM
 To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
 Subject: Re: Fairygirl is in the house!

 Tanya @ 

Re: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread AlunFoto
2010/1/9 Bob Sullivan rf.sulli...@gmail.com:
 To add to Paul's excellent review of the K-7...
 I've had one for the last 6 months and run up 2,750+ exposures.

Just have to add my voice to Bob's and Paul's.

I have two K-7. 6200 exposures combined. Excellent performers, and
endures the weather at least as well as advertised.

For AF in LiveView or video, you have three options. The first is
traditional SLR AF, which implies that when you hit the AF button, the
mirror pops down, does the AF, and pops up again to return you to
LiveView. Naturally this doesn't work while shooting video. The other
AF modes are tech from compact cams. One mode is called contrast,
the other is face-recognition. Both are excruciatingly slow.

In my experience, the light metering and AF speed for ordinary SLR
operation is the hitherto best in any camera from Pentax.

Jostein

-- 
http://www.alunfoto.no/galleri/
http://alunfoto.blogspot.com

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RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread Tanya Love
Thanks Paul!  I figured as such with the video - not needing it, but there
has certainly been times, mainly on a personal level with my kids etc, when
I've been out with them, camera over my shoulder and I've thought to myself,
oh, if only the *istD had a video capability when they've done something
particularly cute.  Plus the HD aspect and HDMI input is certainly
attractive.

With the Live Preview, I am the same, never having had one with the *istD
and that being the ONLY camera I have shot with in oh, about 6 years now!  I
don't see myself ever using it, as like I said, it is a battery sucker,
rather than anything else, especially with the viewfinder having 100%
coverage on the K-7.  I just mainly wondered if anyone else had found that
it has an application that I hadn't already thought of that was
disadvantaged by it's slowness on that point.

Tan. :)

Paul wrote:

The video capability is nice, but it requires manual focus. However, that's
not too much of a problem when using wide lenses in relatively good light. I
bought a hood with diopter adjustment for the live view screen. That makes
manual focus fairly easy, even when moving. I think the HD video capability
in combination with the excellent lenses would be useful for serious
applications. I've been thinking about trying to shoot a demo 30-second
commercial with it. For kid's birthdays and stuff like that, my Sony video
camera is a better choice.

I never use live preview mode and rarely shoot in live view, so I can't
offer any input there. I have used live view occasionally for framing in
situations where I couldn't get to the viewfinder, and I found it useful.
But I prefocused.
Paul



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RE: A K7D for Fairygirl (Was Re: Fairygirl is in the house!)

2010-01-09 Thread Tanya Love
The K20 buffer is large enough that, unless you are a tail gunner, you
probably won't fill the buffer no matter which card you use.
 
- Bill Robb

I just pulled this from the PDML quotations of last year.  Oh, how I crave
to be able to shoot more than 2 shots in succession and not have to wait for
that little orange light to disappear!!  That, and the noise are the two
failings of the *istD that I will be happy to forget!

How many of you have K20s/K7s and do you think the cost is worth the
improvements of the latter over the former?

Tan. 



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