Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/02/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> I always thought that the convenience of being able to take and > download an > image to a computer, subsequently adjust it and then e-mail to anywhere in > the world in minutes would have been a benefit to photographers, > outweighing > some of the inconvenience??!! Kind of like when they invented the > automobile. Everyone that owned a horse didn't like the idea. > Inertia...the human constant." > I think that when we discuss digital photography and the inevitable takeover of digital we need to define our terms pretty carefully....I would be that within 10 years - if not 2-5 - virtually no major daily newspaper will be shooting film for daily assignments, and none will be doing wet printing anymore. On the other hand, I would go along with Jim Brick's 50 year prediction when it comes to PJ project work, documentary photography, and fine art - film will be around for a long time, if for no other reason than the fact that by starting with film and with the high quality lenses used on cameras like the Leica, N and M, digitally stored and printed images end up better than they would if they were shot with digital equipment.... The real question I have, the real hope I have, is for products like those mentioned earlier today, which will allow a "traditional" camera to store take and store digital images...I'd love to be able on occassion to put a digital card, rather than a roll of film, in my M6 or N* F and have instant photos...and then be able to load film and shoot in my normal manner.... > > > -----Original Message----- > From: ottmar-x@t-online.de [mailto:ottmar-x@t-online.de] > Sent: Monday, February 01, 1999 1:22 PM > To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us > Subject: Re: [Leica] RE: Re: glass or plastic > > > > I reviewed the Kodak DC260 for a UK publication and *HATED* the > thing. The > > handling was truly dreadful. Fifteen seconds from pushing the > on button to > > being able to take a picture (there's a software patch which improves > > this, but my colleague found it made only a tiny difference). Neither of > > the viewfinders is adequate. A horrible machine. > > I made the mistake of trying to take a portrait with one of these horrible > things today. > Changing the aperture takes at least 12 pushes of several cryptic buttons > and > then the flash didn't fire anyway. No wonder no one has bought ours. > > A lot of consumer digital cameras have a terribly long delay when pushing > the > button. We just got a shipment of cameras from Jenoptic (formerly > Carl Zeiss > Jena) that were so hideous in this regard that the boss packed them up and > sent them back the same day. The Olympus cameras, which otherwise > aren't too > bad, sometimes suffer from this too... > > Keith Bingman > Riedheim, Germany > > >