JerryPH said:
Auto modes are for people that are either lazy or don't understand how to best exploit their cameras.
Simple as that.
Mav said:
So you believe that about "[size=+1]P[/size]" mode?
JerryPH said:
As it applies to the D200? Yes.
I know that P mode means different things on a Canon, though, but its still a more automated mode to help along people to make decisions for them based on the standards of some unknown engineer in Japan instead of knowing what to do themselves by setting it to full manual mode. Even shutter and aperture priority modes are compromise modes, but that is more to save time rather than make all the decisions for you.
Heck I use P-mode on my D200, again, when lazy or when what I am shooting is not critical. More and more I am in full manual mode when doing portraiture or important family pictures.
OK. What you call being lazy or not knowing how is what I call being more efficient and using features that are available to you to help you get photos that you'd otherwise miss. Try chasing a 1 year old around and you'll
KNOW what I'm talking about. :lmao: Not knockin ya, but your typical family shots and garden variety portraiture ain't the same thing period.
1 year olds go like this :bouncy: and like this :bounce: and like this

and like this

from bright areas to dark areas and back again, don't know to pose, and don't hold still for more than a second, all of which makes your camera settings go like this :crazy: and like this

. P mode can make them go like this: :mrgreen: :thumbup:

Seriously, if your exposure settings aren't already right the instant they hold still, you just missed a shot that's gone forever. And to know they're holding still or doing something cute enough to take a photo of, you have to be focusing all of your attention on
THEM and not looking at what your meter is doing and changing up settings in manual.
"P" mode on Nikons is pretty smart. It's smart enough to favor a higher shutter speed at longer focal lengths assuming no VR. The switchover points are something like <55mm for one map, 55-135mm for another map, and >135mm for the most aggressive map as far as shutter speed. I'm pretty sure Canon is similar. If you're not happy with the settings, one click in either direction of the control wheel lets you trade off a stopped down aperture for a larger one and a faster shutter speed to freeze action or for a portrait, or vice versa for stopped down landscape/scenic shots. If things are slow in general or you don't want to be wide open, just crank up your base ISO a bit and the camera will take care of the rest. If they're too quick or too stopped down, lower it.
BTW, Nikon
does make it easier to use the D200 and higher in full manual mode since they let you adjust exposure settings in full stop increments, including ISO. They give you a separate menu item for EV, ISO, and compensation step sizes. On the D80 and lower they group it all into one combo ISO / SS / Ap / ExComp increment setting, and your choices are 1/3rd stops or 1/2 stops. No option for full stops, which makes full manual shooting in dynamic lighting conditions nearly impossible. If you point the camera from bright to dark you'll have a much better chance of keeping up with a D200/300 and full stop adjustments steps, but will be furiously wheeling away on a D80 trying to do the same. It's stupid. I'd love to be able to get full stop increments on my D80, but am not going to spend double on the D200/300 level cameras just for that. I'll just learn to adapt the P/S/A (P/Tv/Av) auto modes more to my liking, which is what I've done. The D40/D50 do give you ISO adjustments in full stops only which is quite handy, but everything else is in small steps only.
Now back to my original point. Not singling out anybody here, but all of these threads or posts calling people "stupid" for one reason or another are stupid themselves, because everybody has different conditions, different styles, different things they like to shoot, might enjoy a different aspect of photography than you do, and also might have different equipment and lens limitations than you do, thus needing to
shoot and operate equipment differently than you do, for their own reasons. Duh!
A recent PROGRAM mode shot.
1/320s direct fill flash shot at f/9. Right after this she went under the gym set in full shade and I didn't want it to look too flashy so I switched the SB-400 off and the shutter speed went way down (but not below my set 1/125s minimum in Auto ISO, another great auto feature for dummies) and the lens aperture opened way up and I just kept on shooting and never had to touch a thing. Think I'm lazy? BITE ME
An assistant and a reflector would have given better and more natural looking fill lighting here, but my "assistant" was busy helping our daughter down the slide just off camera, so dad had to do his own lighting. I <3 my 1/500s flash sync. :greenpbl: