Hi Mimimay, I found this link that will give you all the technical specifications on your camera, it is quite impressive.
http://www.photographyblog.com/reviews/ ... fications/
For now concentrate upon the top button , it is the Mode Dial / Mode Button Intelligent Auto, P, A, S, M, Custom, My SCN, SCN, Motion Picture, Clipboard.
The P.A.S. & M symbols will be the same on most cameras and they mean the following:
P = This will be an automatic mode, used to specify some setting except for the ‘Shutter Speed’ and the ‘Aperture’ setting. For taking general pictures and letting you twiddle with a few settings.
A = ‘Aperture Priority’ Used to set the Aperture setting, with this you can change what is in or out of focus to the main subject.
S = ‘Shutter Priority’ Used to set the shutter speed, use to catch fast moving objects like running water using a ‘fast’ speed or convey movement with a ‘slow’ shutter speed.
M = ‘Manual’ This setting allows you to adjust both the ‘Aperture & the Shutter’ settings
I suspect that the red ‘A’ is your fully Auto mode, just point and shoot on this setting.
The ‘MS’ (My Scene) is for setting up a customised ‘Scene’ mode, so I would guess that say if you enjoyed taking Portrait pictures of the children, you could customise this symbol to keep the same settings.
The ‘Cust’ symbol, Mmm, not really sure about that, probably some sort of customisation setting.
The other two symbols look like a ‘Timer’ and the ‘Video’ symbols but not sure.
Your SCN button is almost certainly your Still Image ‘Scene Mode’
‘Scene Mode’ will give you settings for taking pictures in the following categories:
Portrait, Soft Skin, Transform, Self-Portrait, Scenery, Panorama Assist, Sports, Night Portrait, Night Scenery, Food, Party, Candle Light, / Baby1, Baby2, Pet, Sunset, High sensitivity, Hi-Speed Burst, Flash Burst, Starry Sky, Fireworks, Beach, Snow, Aerial photo, Pinhole, Film Grain, High Dynamic(Standard, Art, B&W), Photo Frame, Underwater
(a very impressive list)
Which means that the camera will try to give you the best picture under the chosen condition, so ‘Sunset’ will be the best setting for taking a picture of the sun setting over the Nile, whereas ‘Night Scenery’ would be best for say an evening garden photograph. As always it is best just to try them for yourself and see the difference it can make, but always remember ………….. you are not compelled to use these ‘Scene Modes’ the choice is yours, you could just as well set your camera on ‘Auto’ and still get a good picture.
This should keep you busy for a while.
Edit: wrote this as Grandad was posting so some info is duplicated.