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The purpose and use of USER PROFILES


MikeMyers

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I am a new owner of an M8u. I have worked out how to save profiles and how to edit profiles but, for the life of me, I cannot see how to select a profile.

1. Turn your M8 on

2. Press the 'Set' button (bottom left hand button)

3. Scroll down to 'User Profile' at the bottom of the list

4. Press the 'Set' button and you can select any of the User Profiles 0 to 3.

5. When you've selected the one you want, press the 'Set' button to set it and off you go.:)

 

Pete.

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I am a new owner of an M8u. I have worked out how to save profiles and how to edit profiles but, for the life of me, I cannot see how to select a profile.

 

Press the "set" button on the back of the camera.

The last item in the lest should be "user profile".

 

Navigate to this item, press "set" again.

Choose the user profile, you want to use.

Press "set" again.

 

You have now chosen the new user profile.

 

 

Personally, I believe, that the functions and settings on a Leica M are so simple, to completely forego the user profiles, but quickly make the settings by yourself.

 

I always shoot DNG only (anything else gives either not optimal file quality or clogs up the camera).

There are no settings in the menu, that I change, once set up.

The only variables changing for me are:

 

ISO (I choose ISO manually in the set menu from shot to shot, when necessary).

shutter speed,

aperture

 

When I shoot flash, I occasionally change the flash settings, which is seldom and easy enough, to do in the menu.

 

I see the user profiles as an added crutch, somebody at Leica remembered from his Canon and thought: "That might be a useful feature on our new digital camera, we didn't have with the M7!"

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Let's summarize -

 

User profiles are just that - combinations of presets to be used if one feels the need.

 

Which means that only those that feel the need to use them will do so and each user will set them to his own preferences.

 

The main useful thing to come out of the discussion is to set up one "standard" profile to be able to revert to the preferred general camera settings quickly.

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Is there a good discussion here about "USER PROFILES", meaning what they are, and more importantly, why someone might want to use them?

 

How many people here are using these? Are they really useful?

 

I did a 'search' here, but couldn't find anything with a simple answer.

 

Despite the cynical responses, there are reasons you need to be wary of User Profiles as I wrote here.

 

"Profile '0' cannot be modified by the user. And the default quality setting is Jpeg Fine - a strange choice by Leica given that it practically launched DNG alongside Adobe.

 

There's a point 'n shoot lurking in your menu."

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  • 2 years later...
Guest NEIL-D-WILLIAMS

When I get home this is what I plan to set...............dont know if I will use them though

User Profiles

1. Day ISO 200, DNG, WB Auto.

2. Night ISO Auto (3200/100) DNG, WB Auto

3. Sunset ISO 200 DNG, EV -1 WB Kelvin 9500

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I have no need for those profiles as I use DNG and photoshop where u can tweak exposures and colour balance without any loss of quality. Why have a user profile with -2\3 where photoshop can compensate. Also, why shoot in B/W when you can change to B/W in photoshop.

I am sure we all change settings on the fly and forget to return them to normal. That is the main reason I have at least one setting for high quality seasonal shooting so that I can quickly normalise my camera.

 

I have also set one for my HDR trials which quickly gives me the flexibility for bracketed shots without fiddling around in menus. There are several other bespoke settings for which user profiles are ideal. They are an instinctive part of my operating drill.

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I am sure we all change settings on the fly and forget to return them to normal. That is the main reason I have at least one setting for high quality seasonal shooting so that I can quickly normalise my camera.

 

I have also set one for my HDR trials which quickly gives me the flexibility for bracketed shots without fiddling around in menus. There are several other bespoke settings for which user profiles are ideal. They are an instinctive part of my operating drill.

 

Hope he's managed ok in the 3+ years since posting.;)

 

Jeff

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  • 1 month later...

Profile 1 sun light landscape

 

Profile 2 higher iso tungsten light

 

profile 3 iso 400 Vivitar 285 color balance

 

Profile 4 ISO 320 raw + JPEG , 092 IR filter, preview set to monochrome or however I managed to see a monochrome preview. That is why I have the profile.

 

If you like to increase post processing, shoot auto WB, shoot auto exposure, just shoot away and fix it later. I like to get it correct in camera as best as possible and save photoshop for creative work, not rescue.

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