Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/09/26
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Digital cameras have many features. I'm wondering if some wouldn't be better off with fewer. For instance, what if there was a digital camera without an LCD preview screen? It'll probably never happen. And maybe it's not realistic to think it ever would. But if anyone could have bucked the trend it would have been Leica. What if Leica hadn't put an LCD on the M8? We'd have screamed, for sure. But might not the M8 have been a better camera for it? Here's why. 1) no chimping. My first reaction after snapping the shutter on any digital camera is to look at the screen to see if I "got it"! The irony of that is that if I didn't get it I probably just wasted a second opportunity because I was too busy looking at the LCD. And so what if I didn't get it? What are my options? Unless I can fly around the world at the speed of light and turn back time, it's too late. What time I might have had I just wasted...chimping. Consider the case of someone having closed eyes in a shot. It takes longer to verify that there were no closed eyes than to shoot 5 frames, which was the old cure for closed eyes. With the M8 we shoot 5 frames in 2.5 seconds. That's less time that it takes to analyze the LCD. Not to mention, "Sorry but Uncle Bob had his left eye half shut. Everyone line up again!" or "Sir could I please get you to walk back under that bird. I see in my preview window that you didn't have quite the expression I'd hoped for when it crapped on your shoulder." Perhaps we need to see images so we can delete the bad ones and save card space. Yet isn't that one big benefit of digital cameras over film? Each frame is essentially free, and I'm less constrained by the roll of 36. Why not just delete bad images later, after they are downloaded? 2) save space inside the camera. I don't know how much room the LCD takes up, but I'm sure it takes up some. Do away with the LCD and you can make a smaller camera body. Or better yet, allocate that space to sensor electronics. (Apart for the M8 place more emphasis on a good viewfinder. Heck, on many a P&P the LCD has replaced the viewfinder). On the M8 I'm sure having an LCD meant having a fatter camera. 3) Longer battery life. That's not a big issue, but it could be in certain circumstances. Sure I can turn off the LCD. But it's still there. 4) Longer camera life. Might the LCD be the first thing to go? OK, so I might be reaching here. I guess we don't really look at cameras long term today. 5) Less fear of pressing nose up to back of camera. No explanation needed. OK, I'm sure by now everyone is saying that we still need access to the menu. After all we've got options to deal with. A simple shutter speed dial and aperture ring may have been satisfactory way back when, but now we need to toggle through a thousand and one configuration choices. Today a simple situation calls for "Shades-Down-Red-22-Right-Bleed-Dive-Trips-All-Go" when yester-year the most complex situation we had to deal with called for "Sunny-16-and-Hail-Mary"? The ability to immediately see results has detracted from the discipline it takes to make sure we get it right in the first place. "Polaroid-like-instant-view-ability" is very un-"Leica-M-and-the-decisive-moment"-like. For those who absolutely must have a preview device here's the solution. Leica could have offered an LCD as an accessory. Not on the camera, but a small monitor you could put in your pocket. It would have its own battery pack, control buttons, and it would easily plug into the M8. Best of all, just like bright-line finders it could easily be misplaced allowing Leica yet another source of ongoing revenue. Someone on the selling side obviously didn't think through all the advantages. daveR