I just came across this article in which the author argues that back button focusing is no longer necessary.
I use back button focusing to easily switch between AF-C and AF-S but haven’t tried his method yet.
What are your thoughts: is it outdated or not?
https://petapixel.com/2020/01/21/is-back-button-focus-becoming-an-outdated-photography-technique/
Not at all for me, the AF-On button mimics the logic of manual focus so there is a smooth transition between the two. It is too illogical to me to stop focusing by pressing a button. Also, with some AFS lenses I prefer to set focus manually, typically infinity focus with my 12-24mm where AF can be unreliable when things it is focused on get very small. So then i set the distance scale to where I know from experience that the infinity point will be at a certain focal length. No action is then needed to to prevent the AF to kick in when the shutter button is pressed.
Besides that, if one does not want to move the thumb away form the stick, it can be programmed as an AF-on button. I have it programmed to AF-On/AF-area mode combination for a quick switch for subjects like BIF coming straight at me to lock focus on closest subject with my D500.
The only case I have tried to simplify things is under seriously low temperatures in mid-winter (below -30°C) where gloves get too thin and very thick mittens make it too difficult to reliably operate the stick (focus point would often uncontrollably end up at one edge of the frame or another, same with bodies that only have a multi-selector). Then I lock the focus point to the center of the frame and use 3D tracking, lock on to the centered subject and recompose. (Pressing the AF-on button works with some difficulty.) Focus on the shutter button could then be a further simplification, but not as flexible as the AF on button.
BTW, in discussions about focus modes on DSLR's I often see descriptions of how users have programmed buttons to switch from dynamic AF to single point AF. I wonder how many users are fully aware that the dynamic modes initially use a single point and only will move to a surrounding point if the point of the subject it is focused on leaves the initial focus point? Except for the non-ideal conditions with thick mittens and 3D tracking mentioned, I keep my D500 in 25point dynamic mode pretty much the whole time.
Erik, yes habits are hard to break; it took me a while to even get used to moving focus point with the stick instead of a multi-selector. Even more reason to not mess up an action pattern programmed into ones cerebellum by changing the use of the AF-On button!