On another note. I witnessed this same woman after leaving the event on my drive home. She stopped on the side of the road to photograph a tractor cutting corn. I had to stop behind her to allow an oncoming car to go by, and with my window down I could hear her camera "click,click,click,click,click,click,click,click,click" for like 10 seconds.
Baaaaaaaaaaaaaahahahahaaaaa!![]()
Nope, you're wrong.
Where in VT are you? I grew up outside Montpelier.
Nope, you're wrong.
Where in VT are you? I grew up outside Montpelier.
Great people skills you have there. I guess we will have to agree to disagree. I was merely trying to offer some advise, and you're making it sound like everything I've said is wrong. I'm sorry, but I don't have the time nor income to replace the shutter in my camera once a year or less when it runs out.
By the way I grew up in the St. Albans/Sheldon area of Vermont, and currently reside about an hours drive North of Montpelier near Morrisville.
OMG!!! 5,500 frames in a two and a half hour, indoor event! Utterly laughable! She'll need a garbage truck to haul away all the rubbish! I have never heard of such ridiculous overshooting. Wow...what a waste of resources.
Designer said:I wonder how anyone with a reasonable expectation of living a normal life can go through that many photos and select a few good ones. So let's say that she uploads all 5,500 shots, and spends about 10 seconds each frame to decide if it is one that she keeps.
10 seconds per frame, 6 per minute, would take her 916 minutes, or 15 1/4 hours. Add in some time for breaks, you're up to say 20 hours of just deciding which ones to keep. Then there is editing, if any, so add in some more time for that. Oops, forgot to pay the bills, feed the cat and walk the dog, I was so wrapped up in going through all those photographs.
Meh. It's her camera, she can do what she wants with it short of disturbing the event itself. ..5,500 is excessive, but since the OP didn't buy the camera, he can't really dictate what she does with it.