True but lacks nutritional content. 😉
Depends; you knew the message before, to some, it may be new.
Most times, what Thom writes hits the nail right on the head, but this piece was credibility challenged.. How can you claim that for everyone else simple/consumer gear 'is good enough' if in the very next line you say you're the exception and can't do without use of a D800E? Reading this, there's only one conclusion to be made: gear matters.
Beg to differ..What he said was that gear only begins to matter after all of the other factors are of sufficient quality that the gear itself becomes limiting..
Beg to differ..
The raison d'être for pro cameras isn't just pixel count or bit depth, it's that the camera doesn't get in the way of getting the picture. That means responsiveness, high frame rates, fast AF. Pro's don't choose cheapish cameras that are unresponsive, have small buffers and are slow to focus.
My beef with this piece by Thom is that beginners are perhaps even more hindered by gear limitations than your average experienced photographer who knows workarounds for them.. Heck, beginners would even be better served by the very best cameras and shouldn't bother with beginner models.. saves them money in the long run too.
People buy 85mm f/1,4 but does not know what f/1,4 is.
Wow. That was mind-numbing. I switched to skim mode 1/3 of the way through. Thinking about thinking about thinking about gear! Who has time to make images any more?
I approve of such people. After a year or so, they get tired of carrying it around and sell it. Then I can buy it for a lot less than new.
What's not to like about that? 😎
Ok, now wait just a d@mn minute. Making images? Making images? Who buys photo equipment to make images any more? I thought we were supposed to buy this stuff for bragging rights about what the charts say! What are you talking about? THAT is a mind-numbing concept! Wow. 🙄
Beg to differ..
The raison d'être for pro cameras isn't just pixel count or bit depth, it's that the camera doesn't get in the way of getting the picture. That means responsiveness, high frame rates, fast AF. Pro's don't choose cheapish cameras that are unresponsive, have small buffers and are slow to focus.
My beef with this piece by Thom is that beginners are perhaps even more hindered by gear limitations than your average experienced photographer who knows workarounds for them.. Heck, beginners would even be better served by the very best cameras and shouldn't bother with beginner models.. saves them money in the long run too.