Sorry but I don't understand the point in restricting what a digital camera has to offer in the ways you suggest. It has taken me two years just to get used to being able to shoot as many photos as I want or need without worrying about the processing costs.
It's a question of acquiring 'discipline', and breaking your 'technology dependence'.
Almost any Idiot can get into a modern performance saloon car, and go very very fast, relying on traction control, anti-lock brakes, power steering and the myriad advances in suspension and tyre technology; but, an 'expert' can probably hustle a fifty year old 998cc Mini Cooper around all but the fastest of race tracks in less time, without ANY of the supposed 'advantages'. And that is a pursuit that IS significantly technology reliant.
Photography isn't. SO much more is in the eye of the photographer, 'seeing' the image they want to capture, and having the imagination to envisage what it will look like when captured.
They DONT NEED a preview screen to see if what they have shot is any good.... they wouldn't have pressed the shutter unless they expected it to be, because they have understood how the scene in-front of them will translate to 2-dimensions, how the light will play into colour and detail, etc etc etc.
Go through the catalogues of the 'Masters' photo's and so many of them were taken on such low-tec equipment we find it hard to believe they got anything with at all, let alone anything so stunning; Two shot plate cameras, with limited shutter speeds and incredibly slow and variable kitchen brewed emulsions! Etc!
They learned, the hard way, how to get the best from their kit, and not 'waste' exposures; which were expensive and time consuming to prepare, and laborious to lug about to get the shot. They used their eye, they used patience, and they employed discipline and skill to get what they wanted.
With all the whistles and all the bells automatic cameras; and not just digital; last of the line 35mm Film SLR's packed just as much automation as a modern Digi; all they lacked was instant review screen... but heck! If you were THAT bothered about it, you could get Polaroid backs for many!... With all that automation, and now with the almost limitless ability to shoot without constraint in digiotal.... there is a tendency to use that 'facility' to machine gun; take gazzillions of shots, on the principle that at least a FEW of them have to turn out pretty good.
Ie: rather than '
earning' your good photo from hard work, discipline and skill... you simply '
win' it from buying enough lottery tickets to guarantee it!
Works... maybe... but, by never acquiring the discipline and patience to plan your shots, to look for the interest, and acquiring the 'eye' to envisage the translation from scene to picture.... you go down an avenue of experience that merely confirms to you, that to get a 'good' shot, you have to take loads and loads and loads of rubbish to mediocre ones.... and you spend all your time, and all your energy trying to take more and more pictures, in the hope of striking lucky, probably entrenching a belief that you NEED a better camera to ensure better results, and NEVER actually taking the time to find out WHY you don't get them straight away.... WHY can that chap, just fire one frame and walk away with a bludy good picture?
Suggestion then, is to impose self made restrictions and limitations to work within, to MAKE you stop gunning and gimping and THINK more about what you are about; studying your scene, contemplating the angles, taking your time, employing patience, and acquiring the skill to 'get it in camera, in one, no messing.
NOW take that lesson... and you can go away and apply it, and you can start using that capability to take hundreds or thousands of shots.... BUT, rather than getting one in a hundred decent ones... they can ALL be 'good'!
Its an exercise, in control... self control... resisting the impulse to gun & gimp and hope for the best, but to plan and work for it instead.
And its not a new one either; used to come around in the mags time after time; suggestion to get an old 120 roll film camera from... well in those days, before every charity had a 'donations' store in the high-street.... a 'junk-shop' and work with out a meter, by f16-Sunny, and the limited range of apertures and shutters of a point and guess view-finder, focusing by estimating subject distance, aproximating depth of focus, learning to 'compensate' for parallax errors... that sort of thing!
I actually did it with a 1930's Voiglander Reflex! OMG! Upside down mirror image in the waste level finder; I think it had two shutter speeds and three aperture settings! You stand there completely dissorientated, wondering WTF do I DO! There is nothing doing anything for you, nothing giving prompts of clues, and you are having to wrap your head round the inverted immage every time you shift to find a better angle!
In the end you HAVE to get zen... and almost 'feel the force'... stop looking at the camera and look at the scene. Assess it, properly. How bright is it? How far away is your subject. How much do you want or need in focus? You have to take your time and LOOK hard at what you want to photo, NOT the camera... you have to think about the settings that will help you get what you see, the way you want it to translate to paper... THEN you find its just three clicks and your done!
The CAMERA is almost incidental to the process, its NOT the big deal we have been making of it.
There-endeth the lesson.
A simple lesson... and one that can be learned in a day.... but can take a life-time to master!