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 3:28 PM, Gary Todoroff wrote: > Your argument implies that the comparison is between two non- > evolving kinds of equipment, just like mainframers argued that > those little toy computers would never amount to anything. Not really trying to argue Gary. I recognize, indeed am part of the (r)evolution. I'm a user and constantly upgrading hardware and software and often an early adopter. > The P&S cameras are breaking creative ground at a clip that makes > the pro digital cameras appear to be standing still - just like > PC's did to mainframes. SImple P&S cameras today are miles beyond > the pro digital cameras of only a few years ago. Of course they're ahead of the old. But they're not ahead of the pro- stuff today. The huge consumer market allows for the pro r&d and vice versa. > Ignoring the comparison of a broad range of digital cameras today > will be like thinking that COBOL will forever be the computer > language of the future. I try to predict some of the future of > digital cameras at > http://northcoastphotos.com/Lympa-2006-04-30.htm Here again I'm not ignoring comparison of digital cameras. I read everything available on each "interesting" development. I'm very interested in the technology. However wiz-bang the P&S become there will, I believe, always be professional requirements which the P&S will not meet. That is why there's still $30,000 digital backs (no doubt they're using technology developed in the P&S r&d) The big megapixel leaps of the quasi 35mm bodies have put a dent into that market - but the medium format folks continue to invest heavily in larger bit depth, etc. Perhaps in ten years the best P&S will provide 22megapixels and 64 or 128 bit depth - I don't deny that possibility - and it may only cost $999. And perhaps consumers will have computers powerful enough to process those files. But I would expect that the "pros" will be using equipment which is significantly more powerful and considerably better built as well. > I believe that many P&S innovations will make their way into the > pro cameras; indeed some P&S style cameras may overtake the pro > cameras, just as networks of little PC's took over mainframe > computer rooms. So now is a great time to do some serious > comparisons, especially since so many current pro cameras appear to > be made as though they still should hold film and are like the > mainframe dinosaurs that mostly disappeared. I appreciate what you're saying and agree with much of it. However, each tool, in my opinion, needs to be compared to a comparable tool to be meaningful. The only meaningful comparison that I can imagine making with the M8 would be the Epson RD1 - which to my knowledge are the only two precision RF digital cameras currently available. Comparing either one of them to the best P&S, or even a DSLR, or medium format back, simply won't help me in any meaningful way; because I'm extremely interested in a manual RF digital with dependable build quality which will take fine optics. I don't care who makes it. It appears that for the foreseeable future we have two choices to compare; with Zeiss, as we learned this morning, apparently waiting for some technological leap before leaping in. Regards, George Lottermoser george@imagist.com