Wow... This is one sour and bitter thread. Way uglier than most designers could make any camera look.
Let's complain about 500k going to a good cause while bashing a designer that has made a name for himself as one of the most influential designers of our modern time.
Obviously it's possible to not to like a design. But why this whole crusade?
Surely there are more deserving causes to get so upset about?
Highlight: No, it's a thoughtful thread that you disagree with. This is not quite the same as "sour and bitter".
Also, you fail to distinguish between "bashing a designer" and "bashing a design". I really had no opinion on the fellow until I saw this "design statement", a rehash of his own ideas (some but not all of them now old and tired) and others' ideas (some but not all of them now old and tired).
No-one, surely, is against the raising of large sums of money for charity, and no-one can deny that this "camera" has generated a good deal of publicity, in which sense it has succeeded immensely. But does this mean that no-one is permitted to raise questions concerning (for example) the nature of charity as distinct from publicity seeking, or about whether in fact this "design statement" is worth two farthings
as a "design statement" as distinct from a very successful publicity stunt. A cynic might even argue that by turning a Leica into a third-rate Apple clone, he has provoked more discussion than might have been possible if he'd designed a usable camera.
I am delighted that Leica is helping to raise money for this cause. But as someone else pointed out, they're doing it by
raising awareness, not by flogging an effectively unusable camera riddled with Apple design clichés.
Cheers,
R.