Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/05/11
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Alan wrote >Hej Adrian > Japenese inventiveness ... Thats an oxymoron that tops Military >intelligence. Thanks for that one. > >Cheers Adrian, you have just fallen into the hole I dug for you. Yippee. >Now we are quits for the one you dug for me :-) :-) Remove INVENTED and >keep mfd and you could have a point. > I think you will find that the Japanese (Sony) invented the floppy drive and the leading technology for computer monitors (Trinitron tubes) - and they are inventors of the current state of the art memory devices. Sure they could all be seen as mere developments of earlier technology but then isn't everything - including our beloved Leicas? Besides that the most important technology in that game surely is the manufacturing technology and you cannot seriously claim that the Japanese copied that? >BTW I was (and still am) discussing basic inventions not variations on a >theme. I feel comfortable using my Leica or Linhof etc not because of who >invented the concept but because it was built with love and care by >craftsmen who were creating a tool to take photographs. Not a stolen tool >to use as a trojan horse in an economic war. > Well I suppose the floppy drive is a development of the wheel and we have no evidence that that was invented by the Japanese (or the Germans for that matter). I think you do the Japanese camera industry in general as well as the nation of Japan a great disservice by pepetuating the stereotype that all they do is copy: I think you will find that Japan is among the leading nations in the world for registering new patents that their scientific research is of a very high order by anyone's standards and that they do after all make what the cast majority of people believe are the best cameras and films for many applications. If all they do is copy then how come they are still market leaders in so many areas - it can hardly be through cheap labour since they earn a whole lot more than Europeans (except the Swiss) and quite abit more than Americans. Now I would concede that there is an awful lot of highly derivative mid-range equipment coming out of Japan but the fact that they have pretty much wrapped up the 35mm and medium format pro markets is more about quality than price. It is these calibre of cameras I was referring to when I earlier expressed a wish for Leica to respond more positively to pro demands. I know there are people who feel the Germans are the one true heart of the camera manufacturing industry. This may have been true about the time many of the older members of this list were kids but it is not true now and it was not true always before that. In any case it seems to be an irrational and self deceptive view to base purchasing decisions on such a view IMHO that has distinct elements of racialism besides. Again I remind Leica and Zeiss lovers that those in the German photo industry have nothing but the highest respect for their competitors who are for the most part Japanese these days: for that matter they are more than competitors in many cases but partners. It would be great for our love of photography and fine photographic equipment to be a source of friendship and shared enthusiasm rather than aggravation. I am not ignorant of the post-war situation in the Japanese camera industry but it does seem to me that the world has moved on since then and that were it not for the inventiveness and competitiveness of all those in the photo industry we would not have reached the high level of affordable technology we all enjoy in this field today. Oh and next time you fly in a Boeing plane, drive a Rolls Royce or a Mercedes have a good look - I am sure you will find quite a few significant parts came from Japan (and were designed and manufactured there). And are you sure that your Leica glass came from Germany? Anyhow - go get some great photos today! Bests Adrian