I'm in agreement with Mark's main thrust. I don't shoot video, and anything about it that gets in my way on a stills camera annoys me.
Please give an example of that.
So is it too much to ask that some major manufacturer come up with just one digital camera platform that is uncompromisingly biased towards shooting stills?
So which of the DSLRs, m4/3 etc isn't biased towards stills? The only cameras that are not biased towards stills are dedicated video cameras, which ironically can now also do stills.
This is what I do not understand about these complaints? The only real difference for video enabled stills cameras is an extra button to record video, sometimes not even that and if one extra button distresses people that much then nothing is likely to please them.
A lot of people have said here that it's easy enough to just ignore the features and controls you don't need. I suppose that's true, but that's not really the point.
It is the point. No camera will match everyone's needs and the fact that my cameras have numerous features I never use does not interfere with my use of them in the slightest.
You can buy a Cadillac station wagon now that accelerates drastically better, and brakes shorter, than Porsches made in the '80's. Does that mean the Cadillac is a good "sports car?" No, it's still a high performance station wagon, and brings a lot of weight and bulk along that I don't particularly need in a performance car. But if that's what other people want, great. I hope Cadillac sells a lot of them. Happily, I can still go buy a Porsche, if that's what I prefer.
Bad analogy. Performance tends to be the major selling point of a sports car and if you can get better performance from a car that is also more practical that may be a good thing. If however you want to be seen driving a Porsche because it's cooler then an estate [station wagon], that's fine, but then it's not performance you are actually after.
My friend has an Audi estate and one of the benefits of having such a car is low insurance premiums, despite the fact it is a stupidly fast car that outperforms/handles many Audi models marketed as sports cars. Also handy for packing a heap of film gear. And a stealth performance car is much cooler than a sporty looking car in my books. Always fancied a VW camper with a Porsche engine in it myself.
Why the backpedaling? I was looking for the “simplicity” Mark describes. Truth be told, the Leica was a serious pain to load with film, but it ended up getting more use than my autofocus Canons.
In my books something more difficult to use is not simpler. It's a pain in the posterior.
I almost always had a Rollei every time I went outdoors. I got so much satisfaction out of the shooting process distilled down to its barest essence. Those were the years when I really learned to make photographs.
Yet, you may have learned better/faster with a digital camera with instant feedback on the rear screen. And if that's what gave you the most satisfaction, why not go back to it?
Though you may find going back may not be so good having become used to modern gear.
So, if there were a viable “simple” digital stills camera out there, I’d be very much interested. I want the same three physical controls Mark describes (shutter, aperture, ISO); the Olympus OM arrangement would do nicely.
Why not buy the OM then?