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For Nikon s6000 (altho this question is posted in D5000 section) Hope you have read the instruction manual by now. In Auto mode, go through the menu to get the shooting mode - there are I think 2 different continous shooting modes for your camera - one standard and one sport (2 others but they either select the best shot of serveral or combine them to make the best shot). Pretty impressive. Don't look in the manual for 'burst' mode, it's called 'continuous'.
One problem with most point&shoot cameras is that they are designed to be pointed and shot. The camera takes care of things automatically, including focus.
The H50 doesn't have a manual focus mode. The best you can do for close-ups is to switch to one of the Macro modes. Press left on the control button (marked with a blooming flower) repeatedly to select the desired mode. See page 18 in your manual for full details.
The best settings for head-shots or close up photo is portrait and when in portrait mode, the shutter speed is a bit slow and you shouldn't move your camera away from the subject after taking the shot, you have to allow at least a fraction of a second for the image to be totally capture by the lens for a finer registry. Also if the image is a little fuzzy or grainy, you can try to set the ISO into a lower value as well. Hope this helps.
defective image processor. use in continuous mode, but take only 1 shot. may not be expensive to fix. not user serviceable, and not something you can't live with if you can take images in cont mode. consider having it evaluated by the factory and getting a quote for repair if it bothers you not being able to shoot in single shot mode. nikon does seem to have more trouble than most in their non-premium products. good luck mark
The continous icon looks like multiple papers stacked on top of each other (in contrast the normal icon for single shot is a square box with an S in it so you can get it back to normal)
The camera takes shots at 1.5 frames per second, or about three frames every two seconds for image size of 2272x1704.
The shutter-release button has to be held down
Continuous is not available in HI image quality
Shooting will slow when memory buffer fills.
Setting to continuous...
Put your camera in P, S, A, or M mode.
I suggest P mode, this is for Program mode and does everything as Auto does, but allows you to override settings (except Aperture and Shutter).
Press the Menu button
Access the Continuous menu
Select the Continuous menu option, again looks like layered papers.
just wish the anitblur was a seperate button that you could turn on or off at anytime/any mode. I assume that is how image stabilization works on other cameras.
I'm just waiting for a good batch of sample pics from a normal user.
When the camera is at an angle to a business card, document, whiteboard, or other rectangular subject, one side of the subject in the recorded image may appear longer than the side opposite from it. This is called "keystoning," which is caused by the difference in distance from the camera lens to each side of the subject. The side of the subject that is closer to the camera looks longer and the side further from the camera looks shorter. Using the camera's Business Shot Mode automatically eliminates keystoning and gives a normal shape to rectangular subjects. Though the Business Shot Mode is able to eliminate the effects of moderate keystoning, certain conditions may make automatic keystone correction impossible.
Also note that the maximum Business Shot Mode image size is 1600 x 1200 pixels. If you have the camera configured to record larger size images, recording with the Business Shot Mode will produce a 1600 x 1200 size image. When the camera is configured to record images smaller than 1600 x 1200 pixels, the Business Shot Mode will produce images in accordance with the currently specified image size.
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