Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/09/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On Sep 13, 2006, at 11:07 AM, Ernie wrote: > I looked at the video - the M8 looks glorious but............ it's a > piece of computer equipment with a lens attached and as such it will > become outdated in the next 24-36 months. This is a radical > departure for Leica..... the M series for the last 30 years was > already outdated and static for the most part. That WAS the nice > part about the M series. As it turns out I don't even have the money > to pay the sales tax on the upcoming M8 but even if I did I would be > leery of spending so much ( as an amateur) on such a camera. Just my > $0.02. I'm not anti- digital but for now I'm satisfied with my > Pentax DSLR. Just my two cents. Just because a piece of equipment has been supplanted by a new model doesn't mean that the original has lost its function. When the M9 comes out, your M8, if you buy one, will work just as well as it ever did. If it was worth the price to you when you bought it, it will still be worth its price in functionality if not in real dollars. The only thing that would make the M8 obsolete is if the M9 comes with a full frame sensor. That might force many M8 buyers, who frankly will buy the M8 because it can use M series lenses, to reconsider. But you are certainly right that the original M series cameras were obsolete when they were introduced half a century ago. They contained nothing that was new to the photographic marketplace, save the fact that they could accommodate all previously manufactured Leica lenses. I still use a M3 that is 52 years old with perfect satisfaction. But remember that the M camera body is just a box with a shutter, rangefinder and film transport mechanism. The thing that keep old Leicas viable is that you can take advantage of progress in optics and film technology using that old box. I'm writing this on a six year old G3 Mac laptop running the latest Apple operating system. At my typing speed, the computer functions as well as the latest model. Has it lost its functionality because newer equipment is available? The real decisions you have to make when considering the M8 are: 1. Do I have enough older Leica lenses to justify spending a few kilobucks on a digital body which will let them function using only a portion of their capacity? 2. Is a 10MB sensor sufficient for the type of photography I am likely to do in the foreseeable future? 3. Do I want to put up with many of the ergonomic shortfalls inherent in the Leica's 50 year old design? 4. Do I love Leica enough to want to suffer the compromises involved in putting modern digital technology in an antique camera? It's short of like shoehorning a modern V8 engine into a Model A Ford. Larry Z