Magic Lantern Guides: Pentax K20D
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Average customer review:Product Description
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #124077 in Books
- Brand: Pentax
- Model: 84022
- Published on: 2008-05-06
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Dimensions: .90 pounds
- Binding: Paperback
- 272 pages
Features
- ISBN13: 9781600593796
- Condition: NEW
- Notes: Brand New from Publisher. No Remainder Mark.
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Customer Reviews
Climbing the Learning Curve
This is a small-sized book, 7.5 x 4.9 x 0.7 inches, and the only color in the whole shebang is the cover. I'll admit, that I was put off by the totally black-and-white format. For instance, the author (p85) is making a point about the sRGB color space with a black-and-white photo. On the other hand, the book is printed on a heavy (probably 28lb) paper stock, so there is no bleed-through from the backing page. It gives the book a nice heft. The book is perfect bound, which is hugely annoying for a reference book. It should have a wire binding so the pages stay open. Nevertheless, I'll admit that I've been rough on my copy and I haven't lost a page, yet. There is also a "Quick Reference Wallet Card." The wallet card is a nice idea, but I don't think it's that useful in the overall scheme of things.
I've been teaching Digital Photography for five years. When I started, very few of my students had DSLRs. Now, the DSLR students outnumber the point-and-shoot owners. If I thought the point-and-shooters were dazed and confused by their new gadgets, the DSLR folks are generally wading in much deeper water.
A DSLR is a marvelously complex and expensive camera that is like a boat; you can just spend and spend on it and the end is never in sight. DSLR owners desperately want to learn how to use this new camera well, without killing the poor thing.
Enter the DSLR instruction book. I was especially happy to find "Magic Lantern Guides: Pentax K20D." Pentax, compared to Canon, is a sad little orphan. Personally I love the camera, but I'll admit the learning curve was steep for the first for weeks.
The book has grown on me. I carry it with the camera and I've decided it's both useful and entertaining. The writing style is smooth and comprehensible and subjects are well covered in 272 pages. The price, $14-$20, is certainly reasonable.
The book has a comprehensive Table of Contents. The main headings are: Digital Photography, Features and Functions, Digital Recording and In-Camera Process, The Menus, Camera and Shooting Operations, Flash Photography, Lenses and Accessories, and Working with Images. There is a good Troubleshooting Guide, a Glossary and an Index.
I recommend this book to K20D owners. The beauty of a book like this is that when you first get your camera everything seems overwhelming, especially if you weren't an SLR user in your past camera life. The whole process can seem overwhelming. Fortunately, the more you learn, the easier it is to learn more. You can read and reread the "Magic Lantern Guides: Pentax K20D" book. As your knowledge base grows, passages that you read previously suddenly make sense and encourage you to explore new techniques and options.
Disillusioning! Pitiful index; tough techniques ignored - stick with manual
Peter Burian wrote a grand guide on the K10D forerunner, with 5 full index pages to help you through unfamiliar terrain. So I was looking forward to learning about 'dynamic range' and 'burst mode' (movie-like rapid shooting of small frames); certainly not referenced in the pitiful page-and-a-half index. Not even a mention of the helpful 'green button' there. The D-range text repeats the user guide without leaving you any the wiser. The burst mode is skipped, as are pixel mapping and dust repair. Very little more is covered than found in the bare manual's robust index, execept for the translation from Japlish to English.
This appears to be a hurried meet the deadline and page-count quota, rather than a well-organized--filled with tips--field guide of the quality this author is eminently capable of. A not recommended exercise in frustration.
Great Book
This book is better than the one that comes with the camera because it gets right to point. If you need to know something it is easy to find.You do not have to go back and forth to find out how to make a setting.




