Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/11/13
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]According to many contributors, Leica has no innovative products, nor the capacity to be innovative. But do we really know what "innovation" stands for? My handbook defines innovation as: Quote: The process of crating new products, or new ways of making old products, so that the creator has an effective monopoly in the market for as long as it takes others to copy. In the West innovation is seen mostly as the Big Bang type of breakthrough. In Japan it is seen much more as an incremental thing that can turn the smallest change into a dramatic innovation. There is even an appropriate Oriental saying: " A little thing will will always be a little thing, but contemplation of a little thing can be a very big thing indeed." End Quote. Well then the question if the leica company is innovative depends on the perspective. As a big bang view Leica is not and never was innovative. The M3 was not a big bang product. It was as obsolete functionally in 1954 as the R8 is now if we have to believe the current mainstream thinking. Around 1955 many fully featured SLR models and the advanced Japanese rangefinders with all kinds of specs were on the market. If we condemn the R8 because of not having every feature every camera from the other marques possesses, this is exactly the same valid proposition for the M3 at its time. It lacked many features the competition had. And indeed a few years later sales went down dramatically because of the SLR wave. We may admire the M3, but economically it was in the same position as the R8 is now. The M3 had no motordrive, no automatic exposure, a ridiculously low synch speed of 1/50, only a limited range of lenses and the viewfinder did not accept a wide angle lens. The solution of lenses with spectacles was an ergonomic disaster. The Nikon Sp was much more feature laden than the M3. But it did not make it. The SP-M3 pair might be called yesterdays Hexar RF-M6 pair. But is the RF an innovative camera?. By no means. It is a component product, with a Copal shutter, an M6 type viewfinder, the motorwinder form the original Hexar and exposure automation that can be found on every small point and shoot model. There is nothing of a big bang idea here. The only real big bang in photography were the Konica AE and the Minolta AF. But even these technologies wee already on the market for a long time. They only migrated them to SLR models. There is no big bang innovation in photography. If we look at the incremental view of innovation,then the M6 is as innovative as the Hexar. Both add incrementally to the product in order to keep or get marketshare. That Leica adds different features than does Konica or Voigtlander, is not the issue. Both might grow incrementally and I am sure Leica is contemplating the little things. Any camera is a tool, not a product to worship and to talk endlessly about, thought his might have its charm. We should appraise the features and possibilities of the M6 as a photographic tool for its designated type of photography. We do not say the any fourwheel drive car is not innovative because it does not have sportscar type suspension. It is a subtle type of fallacy to define a long list of features collected from the common denominator of all camera models and then discredit any camera that does not match this list. I am just reading Isaac Newtons "opticks" and the first sentence reads: "My design of this book is not to explain the properties of light by hypotheses, but to propose and prove them by reason and and experiments. " If we all could adhere to this statement. Erwin