Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/08/31

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Subject: [Leica] Re: M8 - collectible status
From: hoppyman at bigpond.net.au (G Hopkinson)
Date: Fri Aug 31 04:54:56 2007
References: <f135946b0708310237g5e8ba5dfw10f0786941844b7f@mail.gmail.com>

Dan, discussions are fun but pictures are everything.  Fondle, discuss, 
speculate, theorise, worship Leica asph glass (I do!)
Advantages (and challenges) with the M8 sure, but you need equal skills 
levels, just different details. Dance with who brung ya!
C'mon and add to the Aus LUG postings. Let's see some pics. I heard a rumour 
that Alastair will be back soon with some knockout new
stuff.

Cheers
Hoppy only slightly south of you, I think (in your rain shadow).


-----Original Message-----
Subject: [Leica] Re: M8 - collectible status

Friends in the LUG

>From the responses that I have read in this subject, it would appear that
the M8, apart from some issues related to battery availability and uncertain
costs to keep the camera in "good working condition", serves well as an
image capturing tool.

Obviously this is a camera that is meant to be used and not closeted, or to
be looked at and fondled once in a while. Keeping its value is not an issue
as the M8 is likely to be owned by leicaphiles who have no second thoughts
about putting it to its paces in order to achieve its purpose.  Ultimately
it's the image captured that matters.

In the back of my mind I often wonder if leica lens characteristics that had
a certain signature when film was used is also visible when an image is
recorded in digital. We used to have colourful discussions about "bokeh" of
various optics for example when we were not too distracted by Tilley hats
and single malt whiskeys. Sharpness, contrast and shadow details were other
attributes that we often talk about when we discussed new lenses. I get the
impression that it's now the megapixels that counts or for many folks the
only issue that matters.

It must be difficult to be a professional in this day and age. Once upon a
time, if you did not know a bit about f-stops and shutter speeds, or had bad
eyesight, you did not venture into photography. Automation put image
capturing into the hands of more people. Even then you had to know about
films and depended on the lab to produce the hard copies. Now its utopia. An
average person with a functioning index finger (or thumb) can bring home
beautiful images that possibly outclass the best that even pros can achieve.
Digital photography has an effect of a class equalizer similar to the way
education elevated people from poverty into middle class. I wonder often:
What do professionals now have to do to keep above the herd, to maintain
that cutting edge, to corner that market, so that the income keeps coming
in?

Leically,

Dan K.

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Replies: Reply from kididdoc at cox.net (Steve Barbour) ([Leica] Re: M8 - collectible status)
In reply to: Message from dankhong at gmail.com (D Khong) ([Leica] Re: M8 - collectible status)