goofy4tink
No tags...not needed! Transportation moderator
- Joined
- May 2, 2002
- Messages
- 54,711
I really don't much care what people do. But...when I'm standing there, in the spot that I've been standing in for 40 mins, and some guy comes along and reaches his arm out, with his tablet or even camera, way out so he can get an unobstructed view...well, I'm sorry, but he has now taken away any chance I may have had of getting any shots of the parade coming toward me!!! Drives me nuts.
Tablet, camera...whatever. Way too many people are figuring 'you first, right after me' when taking shots. Their desire to take that great shot certainly is much more important than anyone else being able to get good photos.
I realize that sometimes people get carried away, and can forget there are others around them...for instance, it's the parade and a character heads over to your child. Well, of course you want that great shot of your child, and I'm okay with waiting while you do so. It's easy to forget there is someone next to you, trying to get photos as well.
It's when people hold those lit screens up high....then that's all you can see! At least video cameras of old had a viewfinder...no way you were really impacting anyone else's view! I wish cameras today offered a viewfinder. I would much rather be sitting there, taping something, without that huge screen all lit up. Looking through the viewfinder is so much more polite.
And as to why anyone would go around taping stuff to begin with, hence living life through the lens? Sometimes it's a good thing. For example....my step-mother can't travel to my dd's shows in RI. So, when she has a big solo, I ask if I can tape it so that I can let my step-mother see it. Or, when my nephew in Seattle got married last year, his Japanese grandparents weren't able to be there...too old and ill. So, my sister-in-law walked around with her iPad.....in FaceTime mode. That way her parents could be part of the day. I did overhear some saying that it would have been nice if she could have put down the iPad and enjoyed the day....seems they had no idea what she was doing! So, sometimes there are good reasons! Not always, but sometimes.
Would I take my iPad-mini to the parks? Nope. I bring it to WDW with me, but couldn't be bothered worrying about it in a park. I have my iPhone and my point and shoot camera. I prefer the camera for photos but the phone is okay in a pinch.
Tablet, camera...whatever. Way too many people are figuring 'you first, right after me' when taking shots. Their desire to take that great shot certainly is much more important than anyone else being able to get good photos.
I realize that sometimes people get carried away, and can forget there are others around them...for instance, it's the parade and a character heads over to your child. Well, of course you want that great shot of your child, and I'm okay with waiting while you do so. It's easy to forget there is someone next to you, trying to get photos as well.
It's when people hold those lit screens up high....then that's all you can see! At least video cameras of old had a viewfinder...no way you were really impacting anyone else's view! I wish cameras today offered a viewfinder. I would much rather be sitting there, taping something, without that huge screen all lit up. Looking through the viewfinder is so much more polite.
And as to why anyone would go around taping stuff to begin with, hence living life through the lens? Sometimes it's a good thing. For example....my step-mother can't travel to my dd's shows in RI. So, when she has a big solo, I ask if I can tape it so that I can let my step-mother see it. Or, when my nephew in Seattle got married last year, his Japanese grandparents weren't able to be there...too old and ill. So, my sister-in-law walked around with her iPad.....in FaceTime mode. That way her parents could be part of the day. I did overhear some saying that it would have been nice if she could have put down the iPad and enjoyed the day....seems they had no idea what she was doing! So, sometimes there are good reasons! Not always, but sometimes.
Would I take my iPad-mini to the parks? Nope. I bring it to WDW with me, but couldn't be bothered worrying about it in a park. I have my iPhone and my point and shoot camera. I prefer the camera for photos but the phone is okay in a pinch.