reuno
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I wonder if this new Olympus Pen will have Image Stabilization?
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😉 It would make sense !
I wonder if this new Olympus Pen will have Image Stabilization?
🙄
I wonder if this new Olympus Pen will have Image Stabilization?
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if it doesnt I wont even bother, with today's technology the only reason not to have IS is laziness or stubbornness. Cough cough Canon and Nikon.
That's because Canon 5dIS or Nikon D300is doesn't sounds as good as Olympus PENIS
Except the Pen was a half-frame camera. Four-thirds (and M4/3) is really quarter-frame, i.e. 110 film equivalent, with all the professional quality we've come to expect from 110 film...
It's doubtful it can compete with the Sigma DP2 or the future Samsung APS-C compact on image quality, specially in low-light.
I would suggest you wait another month for the reviews of the DP2 to come out, and also Olympus to annonce its new compact micro four thirds body on June 15.
if it doesnt I wont even bother, with today's technology the only reason not to have IS is laziness or stubbornness. Cough cough Canon and Nikon.
Another reason i like Pentax. They have a lot of respect for users of legacy lenses, whereas I feel as though Nikon and especially canon, though they make superb products, are eager to get you to pay more money for in-lens stabilization, rather than letting you buy the stabilization once and use it for every lens.
There are two major advantages of in-lens stabilization over in-camera stabilization. Both Nikon and Canon know this.
Firstly, in-lens stabilization gives you an approximately two stop advantage over in-camera stabilization.
Secondly, you can confirm the effect of the stabilization control through the optical finder.
I thought you were talking about something new. This was announced months ago.
Another reason i like Pentax. They have a lot of respect for users of legacy lenses, whereas I feel as though Nikon and especially canon, though they make superb products, are eager to get you to pay more money for in-lens stabilization, rather than letting you buy the stabilization once and use it for every lens.
Except the Pen was a half-frame camera. Four-thirds (and M4/3) is really quarter-frame, i.e. 110 film equivalent, with all the professional quality we've come to expect from 110 film...
It's doubtful it can compete with the Sigma DP2 or the future Samsung APS-C compact on image quality, specially in low-light.
It hadn't come out yet, it was announced a year ago by olympus. But I don't see how something that hasn't come out yet can be old news.
I'm sensing a lot of strange negativity towards this camera on this forum, I really thought it would be the opposite. So far Olympus is the ONLY company that's given notice or hinted at the development of a small, light, interchangeable lens camera with a DSLR sized sensor, which is what I thought everyone wanted?
You can't exactly just immediately disregard it or try to flame it - it isn't even out yet!
This camera has had at least a years worth of anticipation since announced. There will be nothing else like it on the market when it comes.
Even if it doesn't have IS (which it will - olympus has said so), doesn't have an optical VF (highly doubt it will), doesn't have an apple interface, doesn't come in black, doesn't have a little flower pot where you can stick your favorite flowers so everytime you lift it to you face you can smell daisies I'll still be buying it.
Why?
Because at the moment (and when it arrives very soon) there will be nothing like it. The Canon G10 has a sensor that is near microscopic in comparison, the Panasonic LX3 and Ricoh GRD/gx100 are just as bad, the sigma DP1/DP2 has a weird foveon sensor and underdeveloped interface/AF that I don't want to have to rely on for work, not to mention NONE of the above have interchangeable lenses.
Details details, the concept of the camera remains - a big sensor and interchangeable lenses in a compact camera. If the first one doesn't meet everyones exacting requirements chances are down the line there will be one that comes pretty close. Its the concept - the baselines on which the camera is developed that is so exciting.
I agree with Gavin about the animosity, IN THIS FORUM, toward this new Micro 4/3rd camera and against 4/3rds in general.