Has anyone pre-ordered the x100?

The camera has a 23mm F2 lens, aspheric. APC-C sized sensor. The lens is foxed. The interest here is due to the hybrid optical/electronic viewfinder. It is comparable in price to a mirrorless camera with an F2 lens and high-resolution electronic viewfinder.

I'll probably get one, undecided. "New out of the Gate" cameras such like this usually have birth pains that get sorted out by early adopters. Means sending the cameras back. This be ould be different, but is is largely into territory with the hybrid finder, new lens, new processor, and new sensor. "FIRMWARE" issues account for more than 50% of problems these days, puts hardware glitches into the minority. But this camera is new on both fronts.

Anybody else have an 80386 that was not double-sigma rev'd...
 
I'm going to see if there is a kit price on the case, and maybe a hood. But hopefully by the end of March I'll be unboxing it.
 
The discussion about serviceability is an age-old argument and a big hit among Leica lovers. Long-term parts availability is a special feature of a very small number of brands, and has to be appreciated on its own merits.

Other than that, it is just a normal fact of life that once a product has outlasted its support lifespan, users will be left alone with their products. That's the fate of most of today's high-tech products.

Conclusions:
  • Don't buy if you can't amortise a product within its normal support lifespan.
  • If you want service beyond that time, you're most likely a collector. You need to consider this in your purchase decision, as this rules out 98% of all technologically advanced products.
  • Long service life and cutting-edge technology apparently rule out each other, as design costs will compete with the costs of long service life. For manufacturers, it is difficult to amortise both and still ensure an attractive market price.

Most likely in Fuji's case and most DSLR's manufacturer's -

it be called Planned obsolescence 😀
 
If you find an extremely popular printer from 10 years ago, there is a chinese ink supplier on ebay, for certain.

My HP 5MP LaserJet is nearly 15 years old, and I've had no problem buying genuine HP toner cartridges for it. It's also easy to get Apple ImageWriter II ribbons, and those printers are about 25 years old (same ribbon is used by DEC LA-75's).
 
I'm undecided on the X100, on one hand it looks like a good walk around camera for me, on the other it doesn't look that practical. I want to see some real world performance tests. I'll admit to being anxious to read a review from the British "Black+White Magazine".
 
I've been saying that I want you guys to Beta test it for me but I got caught up in the mania and made a $100 deposit at Precision Camera too. I've heard good things about the shop and I can avoid sales tax.

I'm looking at my poor obsolete Pany G1/20mm now... wondering how I'll get $300 for it in two months?

My rationalization for ordering it is that the glitches for the newer Nikons haven't been that major and figuring Fuji is probably at least on their level, and hopefully not Canon's!

And otherwise, it seems like it will be ideal camera for me. Not expecting perfection but it seems closer than anything else.
 
Want to pre-order, but B&H won't let me, and I won't order from Adorama. Ordered three times from them, bad experience all three times. Tried to roder from Penn Camnera here in DC. I didn't even get past the word Fuji before the surly old man replies snarkly, "We don't carry anything Fuji"
 
Fuji X100

Fuji X100

Somebody please tell me why it is a good idea to order a camera that nobody has seen in the flesh, nobody has handled or tried, nobody knows the price, nobody knows if it is even of value? Particularly when in three months from being supplied, it will be obsolete! I am mystified - or am I stupid?
 
Somebody please tell me why it is a good idea to order a camera that nobody has seen in the flesh, nobody has handled or tried, nobody knows the price, nobody knows if it is even of value? Particularly when in three months from being supplied, it will be obsolete! I am mystified - or am I stupid?

I was going to give you the benefit of the doubt till your last line. Please tell me how in 3 months any camera is obsolete? I am still making beautiful prints from my 5 year old 5D. It will keep making beautiful prints until it dies. When the 5D II was released, my 5D I didn't stop working.

If this is the format, lens type, and lens resolution someone needs, it will last quite a while. If you don't think enough information is out there to pre order, well don't do it, but several people do feel they have enough info.
 
Somebody please tell me why it is a good idea to order a camera that nobody has seen in the flesh, nobody has handled or tried, nobody knows the price, nobody knows if it is even of value? Particularly when in three months from being supplied, it will be obsolete! I am mystified - or am I stupid?

Well, for many of us it represents hope i.e. the camera we've been waiting for. $1200 isn't that bad compared to Leica stuff and I'm of the opinion that Fuji can't F it up so bad that it will just completely suck. That said, I haven't pre-ordered. Fuji isn't Leica ... they will be able to supply a good deal of cameras at launch.
 
I'm undecided on the X100, on one hand it looks like a good walk around camera for me, on the other it doesn't look that practical. I want to see some real world performance tests. I'll admit to being anxious to read a review from the British "Black+White Magazine".

Are you sure?!! You'd be better of reading the Fuji product brochure - same thing really.
 
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