barjohn said:
However, the medical field is far different in that you and every other player has to operate under FDA rules (I know not everyone plays by the rules). In the high technology world competitive pressures often cause a company to bring a product to market before they would like.
In the medical field aside from regulations and the possibility of being class-action-sued into oblivion, we also lack the luxury of a public willing to excuse obvious design blunders and accept moronic "solutions" and empty concessions. If we'd made a hip implant where people had to walk sideways no one would want one just because it had our brand on it--that's the salient difference between Leica and other camera companies as well. I daresay Canon or Nikon had put out a camera in 2006/7 that needed $100 IR filters on each lens to give passable colors, nobody would be buying it or defending it. Bugs and teething issues are completely different from this.
I have long argued that smart companies would put the product into the hands of early adopters like the ones that frequent bulletin boards ....I understand their fear that too much information will leak out to their competitors but they would find out about problems and have a chance to fix them before it went to the general public.
Given the denial and defensive posture of unofficial beta-testers such as yourself I can't see where Leica would have gotten any more useful feedback than they did from their official beta testers...or would have used it if they did.
Leica marketing screwed up and they are paying for their mistake in numerous ways.
Yes, had they recognized people would buy the M8 and imbue it with superlative powers no matter what, the marketers would probably have felt completely at liberty to spin the IR-filter thing as a "feature" right from the start--and saved themselves giving away a bunch of filters.
I would still argue that TODAY and in the foreseeable future (1-2 years out) that there is no better solution available. Maybe lurking in someones R&D lab lies the ultimate Leica killer camera and we just don't know about it. I for one am willing to gamble that there is not and I put my money where my mouth is. If I am wrong I will be the one to suffer for it.😉 Yes, I will probably whine about it if it happens.
I'd rather shoot my RD-1 interim and see what happens. If you're right and Leica doesn't rectify the IR issue with a permanent solution on the sensor, I will reluctantly and sadly migrate once and for all to a full-frame Canon dslr, weight and volume nonwithstanding. I won't be happy, but moreso than paying $5K for an M8 which is already behind the state of the art in pixel count, high-ISO performance and crop factor (all which I was and am wiling to live with) and having to add insult to injury with a stack of expensive, funny-looking filters (which I am not willing to live with). Different strokes for different folks.
I still don't get why you are so angry about their screw up when the people that purchased them are not.
Just because a few people are willing to accept and rationalize the screw up doesn't mean it's abnormal for me (and thousands more who would've bought an M8 otherwise) not to. I am angry because I had the money down and was all set to get one. I'm not just some guy who never intended to get an M8 and gets his jollys taunting the guys who own one. I wish I could swallow as deep as you guys but I just can't.
If they were stuck with a camera with problems they could not live with, then I would understand your point of view and agree with you completely.
Then you miss my point entirely. The more complacency--let alone heaping undue praise--on the M8, the less likely Leica will rework it so it doesn't need filters. I understand that will please the current owners no end, not so much because they're happy with filters, but because the prestige and monetary value of their purchase won't be diminished. But the result will very likely be the end of Leica as a camera company. In November there was a full-production backlog until late this coming summer. Now the backlog is only to the beginning of March. That's five months worth of production in cancelled orders. And nobody knows if any significant numbers will be sold after the current backlog is met. This is
hugely bad for Leica, who've pinned their survival on this camera .