:bsmilie: at f/8, f/11, f/13, f/16... and assuming wide angle lens..
something has to be very wrong if the tree, plant, ant, uncle, auntie, xmm, little finger you want in focus is not in focus WITHOUT live view. :bsmilie:
You are assuming ultrawide angles. Is every landscape photo shot at ultrawide angle?
If the scene has objects that are of interest at both near and far distances, one must pick the correct focus point in order to make some suitable compromise. Of course, if one does not pixel peep and is happy as long as everything looks reasonably sharp, then it does not matter.
Personally, I will not shoot past f/11 on an aps-c camera (after some painful experiences) regardless of whether the camera is 8/12/14/18 MP. Again, if one does not pixel peep or if there's nothing distinct in a scene, then it does not matter.
Don't like dat say la. Hyperfocal distance focusing look very good in live view mah! :bsmilie:
Hyperfocusing is about compromises as well.
How exactly do you define hyper-focusing?
The old standard definition is to look at the choice of focal length, then calculate a suitable focusing distance and aperture size. I can assure you it does NOT work when there are NEAR objects which lie OUTSIDE the hyperfocusing distance.
A better method is to locate the nearest object of interest in a scene, focus on another subject at double the distance and shoot at small apertures. I have done that in the past too. But nothing is more assuring than manual focusing because AF is not always the most reliable thing on earth.
The TS asks if anyone uses live view in DSLRs. I have merely described how I have used it and what I think of it. If you have no interest in the use of current technology and prefer to keep yourself in stone age, please do not go around deriding others.