Am 12.09.2015 um 04:01 schrieb Carlos E. R.:
Well, I only have this camera since two weeks, I'm learning ;-)
Enjoy! ...
It is not my intention to "develop" all photos, only some that are worth it. With film and little money, you had to think a lot before taking a photograph. Now with digital photos we shoot by the thousands, but few are really good.
Nothing stops you from thinking a lot with digital cameras, too, I always break out in a sweat during photo sessions for thinking so much :-) If you have enough backup space (shouldn't be a problem with the cheap external drives nowadays) keep ALL your raws. In some time you'll look at them very different, what you consider failed today might be a great image in future. I still suffer from my beginners error to throw away "failed" negatives that now I'd really love to have...
For instance... this new camera has a mind of its own: if it thinks there are no conditions for taking the photo, it doesn't shoot.
I guess your camera is connected to google. google always knows better what you want than yourself.
I went to a wedding this weekend and missed a few good shots because the camera refused to shoot.
This can happen, for example, when the camera is set to autofocus and cannot focus, because it's too dark, too misty, too close... what ever are the limits of your autofocus. Maybe it cannot find a "useful" automatic setting of ISO/aperture/speed. Then use manual focus (or autofocus on a part with enough contrast at the same distance and keep the trigger half pressed until you go back to the desired frame) or manual ISO/aperture/speed settings. Just experiment. Have fun! Daniel -- Daniel Bauer photographer Basel Barcelona http://www.daniel-bauer.com room in Barcelona: https://www.airbnb.es/rooms/2416137 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org