Ira wrote:It takes Compact Flash, xD-Picture Card or Microdrive.
I have a CF card in there, I never heard of xD, and I THINK a Microdrive is like an external drive.
I just haven't been able to sit down with the camera for more than an hour two nights in a row, but wouldn't you think that this would be ENOUGH to learn how to take one stupid picture and set the display/save options? It's totally nuts:
There's a 10-step Quick Start sheet, but I ain't started NOTHING yet. And the way the huge manual is organized, one would think that these details would be AT LEAST in the first 50 pages. Like, I still don't even KNOW what internal memory it has. (That wasn't going to be a factor in my purchase decision anyway, because at the highest resolutions I always shoot at, the internal memory never does you much good anyway.)
I'm really excited about getting into this thing. It's bringing back my old passion for 35mm, and at around only $800 for the camera and two lenses, I didnt go TOTALLY nuts. But I can't believe how difficult this is to figure out.
It's totally retarded--or I am.
xD is something that Olympus and Fuji came up with, I wouldn't bother with it because your cost per gigabyte is really high compared to CF you also can't get them in large capacity.
Mircodrive is exactly that, a tiny hard drive that is the size of a CF card, that is the cheapest cost per gigabyte. It has it's problems though, since it is a spinning hard drive, it is somewhat fragile. Also depending on the card, they can be slow. I have a Hitachi 2gig card that is fine however, I have a Segate 4gig card that is super slow.
CF card is the cheapest one to get and most versitile, everything has a CF port.
I played with that camera, it isn't too bad. I was able to take some shots in the store. It is pretty similar to mine, flip the switch to "On" turn the dial to "auto" and fire away using the default settings. After you get comfortable with the camera, then you can start turning knobs. Check to make shure your card is formatted. There should be a format option under "card setup". If you do this, anything on the card it will be gone.
Steve, yep that is due to the mag differences between the viewfinder and the image sensor. On the point and shoot you will get the same thing the LCD display image is usually spot on. It kinda drove me nuts till I started using the LCD display. I didn't use the display because it would eat batteries. After I got higher capacity batteries, that was a non-issue. On the DSLR, you don't have to option to use the LCD to compose shots.