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Anonymous
>>117753 Is right. Cease trying to improve immediately. We shitty amateur photographers must remain in control of this piece of shit board. mwahahaha...
Okay, go check out Wikipedia on how cameras work and you'll get a feel for the concept of apertures and whatnot, so you'll have an idea of how things interact. Basically, higher ISO means more sensitive images, but that will invariably mean you'll get noise. Lower ISO will mean a cleaner-looking image, but you'll need to use a slower shutter speed( like 1/5 second) to get enough light. You can manually force it, but that will leave you with generally bad photos.
But that's HARDLY the entire story on the subject, so DO check out Wikipedia and see what it has to say.
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