- Joined
- Jan 16, 2006
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- 5,903
I won't repeat everything that everyone else already said, but...a. Will the camera take away from my "vacation time".. i.e. will I be so busy changing lenses..and carrying around my camera bags that my vacation experience will be affected?
b. Will I be able to let an average person use my camera to take a family group picture like I could with my P-N-S?
c. Is the learning curve so much that I will need to commit hours and hours of "practice time" with the camera to become really good with it?
d. Will I need to buy an external Hard Drive due to the "huge" sizes and numbers of pictures that I may be taking with my new "toy"?
e. Is it possible to just use the "kit" lens and a telephoto lens and be "happy" with all your gear.. or will one lens lead to another.. and another.. etc. etc??
a. Like the others said, you can stick with a decent basic zoom lens. I recommend getting a lens hood for it if it didn't come with one and leaving the camera on all day with no lens cap. When you want to take a shot, just give a half-press of the shutter and it will be ready virtually instantly - you will find that you can take a photo much, much faster than you can with a PnS. Zooming is also much faster since you're rotating a ring vs pressing a button and waiting.
b. Yes but the danger is that the others might want to use your camera more.
My wife took hers on a "girl's cruise" a couple years ago and one of them ended up buying my first DSLR because she fell in love with using a proper viewfinder and the mirror slap noise. 
c. Generally DSLRs are easier to use then PnSs IMHO - by and large, they have the controls in the same place and you just look through the viewfinder, turn the zoom ring, and press the shutter. I find many PnSs to be more difficult because of many different menu and button styles between different cameras, and many options are hidden in strange places. The only real difficulty is that you have a smaller depth of field so you may have to learn (or re-learn if you did much film photography) about where the camera is focusing. Generally, the DSLR will take a better photo faster about 99.9% of the time.
d. If you shoot in Raw mode, you'll need a lot more space. If you don't ever expect to get too serious, then you can leave the camera in jpg mode - but if you think you may get more serious in the future, you may want to shoot in Raw or Raw+Jpeg and just store the Raws for now, and in the future you could go back and process the photos to get more out of them. This is especially true for special trips like Disney.
e. As has been mentioned, I'm a bad example
but I very happily shot with my K1000 film SLR for many years with only two zoom lenses and a 28mm prime. Look at it this way - with a PnS, you're stuck with nowhere to go. With a DSLR, even if you only use one basic zoom lens and shoot in jpg mode, you may not be taking advantage of all that the camera can do, but you're still way ahead of where you'd be with the PnS.
