crfriend wrote:As far as "digi-cams" go, most have "manual" settings, although you need to access them via the assorted buttons.
\begin{rant}
The camera I have (borrowed from my brother) does have a "manual focus" feature. So to speak.
You put the camera in a special mode. Then you run around and find something that is at the distance you want, you push the shutter button down
partway, and
while you are doing that, you find another odd button somewhere on the camera and push it. If you are lucky, and the camera focusses on what you intended it to focus on, and not something else,
and if you don't accidentally push some button that turns
off the "manual focus", it will keep whatever focus it had. What with waiting for the computer at several points during this process, it comes out to about 20 seconds. Of course, there's no such thing as, say, a distance display to
verify that you got the correct distance. You just have to shoot and then look at the results.
With an old-style camera (SLR), I can focus a picture in about 1 second, 2 at the most (e.g, if there aren't any sharp lines in the subject.) AFAIK, auto-focus cameras don't do any better, and they do a
lot worse with moving subjects. My current digital camera just gives up on subjects like marching bands. FWIW, I had to use the "manual focus" feature to get the "twirly" pictures to come out -- if I left autofocus on, everything in the picture came out blurry.
Auto-exposure has similar problems.
Back in Ye Olde Days, my father bought me an SLR, and since he wanted to get me a
good SLR, it had automatic shutter-speed adjustment. (But manual focus, Gott sei dank.) Now, I did a lot of indoor available-light photography, in rooms with exposed light fixtures. So when I took a picture, I had to make sure I didn't get a light source in the picture, or the only thing that would be visible in the print was the light source. There was a "compensation" adjustment, that would go up or down 2X in exposure, but that wasn't always enough. I eventually bought another camera, with manual exposure -- I would go into the room, set the exposure, and forget it. No more mis-exposed pictures.
Give me manual everything. It's a lot easier.
\end{rant}