I must admit, I chimp at times.
Though, it is more in the case of:
- Take photo
- Glance at picture review / histogram to see if ok, if looks ok, leave it at that.
- If photo looks a bit sketchy or the histogram peaks at points that i'm not too keen about i'll zoom in, check the focus and whether points are too blown out, or too underexposed, so that I can adjust my settings from there.
I do that, mainly because - It's better to learn on the fly, than take a crap-load of shots and realise all of them are buggered and you could have changed one simple setting to correct the problem if you'd spent 1 second just double checking your settings.
I also, like showing the subjects the LCD after a picture (or the best one after a series of pictures), because it usually gets them interested and I get comments like "I'll have to get copies of that off you". It's good promotion, especially if they may not know you, or know the person you're shooting for and may not be told the internet address for the shots.
Also, it piques their interest up-front and gets them eager. Otherwise they may care less about the photos you took, as they have no idea what they are like.
A good example of (perhaps only common sense) where people think the camera does the majority of the work, is the other day at said corporate race day. I took photos of the horses running by, essentially got my settings set up before hand, waited for them to round the bend onto the straight and just held the shutter down as they went past. Following the pack. Got some really good shots.
I gave the camera to a friend's missus, as she is interested in purchasing a dSLR and told her to have a go with it. She tried taking photos of the horses the next time around - She stood still and didn't focus the camera, didn't follow the pack or horses along and just shot at a point in the track, then was surprised that when she tried to take a photo, the horses had actually passed and she missed the entire pack and now only had a few underexposed shots of the ground.
For most people though, they just can't understand the way a camera works, they don't comprehend what the sensor does, or what film does, and how a photo is made. Therefor, they don't understand shutter, aperture and ISO. When you give people a go on the dSLR, they put it on Auto and get happy snaps like a point and shoot, but with better images due to the depth of field created, and then think that it's easy to be a photographer.
Ahh, well. You have to take solice in that if they liked the shots, regardless of who they give credit to, you know the credit is really yours, and if they liked the shots, you've done a good job.