wkkato
wkkato
Is it now the time for a groundswell of support for the Nikon RF digital body seeing that the D600 with its 24.3 mp live view sensor IS 100-6400 is now available?
Warren
:angel:🙂:angel:
Warren
:angel:🙂:angel:
Nikon is a photographer's camera maker, its also a trend-setter and the most respected camera maker right now. Why would they join the "Leica wannabe mirrorless rat race" to appease the gear fetishists?
Fuji and Sony are already busy there so let them continue on until the "fad" fades away.
Not sure if sarcastic or not. Are you saying mirrorless cameras and compact cameras with large sensors, some with interchangeable lenses, are purely a fad? Merely another item of fascination that will fade away in a blink of an eye when the next fad starts? What survives longer then? DSLRs? In the face of history of photography, the duration for which viable DSLRs have been available could be classified as a "fad" too.
Dismissing market patterns is what many many photography companies and manufacturers did in the last hundred years or so. Most of them met an untimely demise.
M4/3, what was that all about, how much money got sunk into that?
And once FF cameras become common, do you think these APS-C mirrorless cameras would have any 'trend value' left in them?
How long before the first FF mirroless? 6 months? a Year?
The main drivers of photography market today are trend-buyers, fad-chasers, otherwise absurd products like the new Hassleblad won't even see the light of day.
I don't know why you talk about m43 in past tense. They have a huge market share, growing. People buy this because they don't want to carry around big cameras. With those cameras you have an attractive size combined with good quality. Those users buy the original lenses and don't think about crop factor. Why should they build a FF camera with a bigger body and bigger lenses when customers want it small?
For the sake of argument, if you have a M4/3 camera or lens, try to put them up for sale in your local classified.
The reason I say this is because my friend had a hard time selling a Panasonic GF2 with its 14-42mm kit lens, two batteries, all in the original box with everything in excellent condition for $200!
For the sake of argument, if you have a M4/3 camera or lens, try to put them up for sale in your local classified.
The reason I say this is because my friend had a hard time selling a Panasonic GF2 with its 14-42mm kit lens, two batteries, all in the original box with everything in excellent condition for $200!
Nikon is a photographer's camera maker, its also a trend-setter and the most respected camera maker right now. Why would they join the "Leica wannabe mirrorless rat race" to appease the gear fetishists?
The Gf2 is not like cell-phone quality compared to latest M4/3 cameras, but the $200 was for the kit lens included, which means that M4/3 lenses are as useless as their bodies because the format has no future.
Future. the is the important word when it comes to interchangeable lens cameras and lenses.
Going back to the topic. Nikon Mirroless actually does have a future because it take Nikon lenses with an adopter and can work as a superzoom with very fast AF in the case of AFS lenses.
Nikon is not a rip off company and that is a very rare thing today.
The Gf2 is not like cell-phone quality compared to latest M4/3 cameras, but the $200 was for the kit lens included, which means that M4/3 lenses are as useless as their bodies because the format has no future.
Future. the is the important word when it comes to interchangeable lens cameras and lenses.
Going back to the topic. Nikon Mirroless actually does have a future because it take Nikon lenses with an adopter and can work as a superzoom with very fast AF in the case of AFS lenses.
Nikon is not a rip off company and that is a very rare thing today.
Nikon is a photographer's camera maker, its also a trend-setter and the most respected camera maker right now. Why would they join the "Leica wannabe mirrorless rat race" to appease the gear fetishists?
Fuji and Sony are already busy there so let them continue on until the "fad" fades away.
Hmmm....somethin' tells me MFT won't "fade away"...fact is, it's likely the wave of the future...kinda like the "full-frame" 35mm film format was 90 years ago or so...and I'll bet people called that a fad, too.
Said it before: the progress of technology makes cameras progressively smaller , lighter and more efficient. Ditto with the sensors--they will, if they are not already doing so--give resolution just as good, or better than, a so-called "full-frame" sensor. Then it will likely be the "full-frame sensor" which fades away...
All right, I'll split now. You can get back to your regularly scheduled thread...
A single sample about a camera/lens sale in one marketing channel is not sufficient information to evaluate the long-term prospects for the world-wide M4/3 market segment.
That makes no sense.