F
Frank Granovski
Guest
Bill, I find the reading difficult because he rambles on and on and on and with few periods.
Frank Granovski said:Bill, I find the reading difficult because he rambles on and on and on and with few periods.
Huck Finn said:Agree with him or disagree, love him or hate him, Erwin provides a technical analysis for free that would cost hundreds or thousands to obtain otherwise. .
Frank Granovski said:Bill, I find the reading difficult because he rambles on and on and on and with few periods.
Bertram2 said:And we still don't know who pays him for all that effort. Maybe he is rich and does that all just for fun ? 😀 😀
Huck Finn said:Touche', Bertram. Point well taken.
bmattock said:That's not a point, that's innuendo. Points have, well, a point. For instance, a copy of a pay stub. An admission of guilt. Something along those lines. Innuendo is simply a way of destroying character without actually having to stoop to call someone a liar. It's ungentlemanly.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Huck Finn said:I stand corrected, Bill. I think that we agree. The data is there from Leica, Zeiss, & others for anyone to form their own opinion & take issue with Erwin's analysis & conclusions regardless of any other factors anyway. Your point is well taken that it's what he says that matters in the end & that the criticism pro or con should be based on his product & not other extraneous issues.
Huck
bmattock said:Are movie critics great directors? Are sports commentators all great athletes? Do political commentators frequently hold high office? Food critics - are they all wonderful chefs? Oh yes, and the Times book reviewers - they all have written top ten-selling novels, right?
Didn't think so.
Expertise in a field is not relegated to technical proficiency only.
But it all seems to come down to one thing, 'sour grapes'. People dislike anyone who sticks a pin in the balloon of their faith, and if they cannot find a logical reason to dispute their assertations, they'll use whatever they can find.
Ah, I had forgotten about the OTHER form of character-based attack.
When one has nothing logical upon which to base an argument, simply imply that the person one dislikes is in the pay of the company they often tout, thus throwing their reputation to the dogs without actually having called them a liar. Imply that they are nothing but a paid mouthpiece for company XYZ, thus nullifying anything they might say about that company. No proof, you understand, but sly innuendo will impeach just as readily.
There is a huge difference here.Are movie critics great directors? Are sports commentators all great athletes? Do political commentators frequently hold high office? Food critics - are they all wonderful chefs? Oh yes, and the Times book reviewers - they all have written top ten-selling novels, right?
Ben Z said:but OTOH I will admit thinking it to myself more than once. As someone who has lived a good deal of life, I know better than that every new offering from one particular manufacturer can be superlative and faultless, so starts the seed of suspicion.
Quite often Erwin has described a very small, incremental improvement over the discontinued predecessor using phrases that suggest much greater magnitude, and implying a lack of discerning standards on the part of any individual who doesn't perceive it with the same level of significance. That I think is where someone with a bevy of last-generation Leica lenses (or some other brand lenses), who has achieved a modicum of success (or perhaps just has put years of effort into a body of photos he's proud of) takes Erwin's seemingly arrogant attitude toward the importance of minute optical phenomena as a personal insult, especially since he seems less interested and less capable in photography vs lens-testing.
What I think Erwin lacks is tact, and an understanding that his "audience" wants to be entertained (or at the very least, not insulted) while they're being informed. Nobody reacts as negatively toward Brian Bower, who also praises Leica products, and I believe it's because he does it without arrogance or condescention toward the equipment his readership may already own, and by implication, toward the readers themselves.
BTW I've met and spoken with the man personally, he doesn't wear a red suit and carry a pitchfork like he's made out. He's friendly, disarming and extremely intelligent, with a thirst for knowledge.
celluloidprop said:He's writing a technical analysis of lenses and judging their qualities - that is a job where you expect the individual to have some skill with a camera.
celluloidprop said:There is a huge difference here.
Puts isn't a photography critic - he isn't writing about Cartier-Bresson or Mary Ellen Mark or Eugene Meatyard. He's writing a technical analysis of lenses and judging their qualities - that is a job where you expect the individual to have some skill with a camera.
When I read a review of a new non-linear editing system, I expect them to have some passing familiarity with editing a film. When I read a review of a guitar or amp, I expect the reviewer to know how to play a bit.
Those are designers - people for whom engineering is the first calling. You don't have to be Tiger Woods to study how the slope or mass of a club-head is going to effect performance.Those who make the finest musical instruments, guns, golf clubs, race cars--the list goes on--are often barely adequate players if that.
Yes and no. I don't read Photo.net very often. It tends to draw the type of people who would shout anything to the world that upset them, whether they're knowledgable or not. Other people I've read criticizing him (on the LUG, etc.) have legitimate arguments.I read reviews of audio equipment all the time - reviewers seldom are equipment designers, and I have no idea what qualifications they may hold in the way of EE degrees and so on. I sometimes find that the person writing seems less than technically proficient themselves, and so discount their article. It has never made me want to go out and shout it to the world - the Puts-haters seem to feel the need to do that - do they not?
Alec said:Interesting that During the Korean war it [the M3] was the main camera to record the events. Must have been prototypes, as IIRC the official product launch was in 1954, whereas the ceasefire was signed on 27 July 1953.