Benjamin Marks
Veteran
I am always surprised by the level of emotion that these things stir up. I should say, I will own an M9 when I can afford it. And for that to happen either my bank balance will have to increase or the price will have to decrease. But I have already started plotting and my guess is that it will take about three or four years for the stars to allign. In the interim I will be happily chugging away with the gear that I already have. I think that the shutters on the cameras I own right now will outlast my natural life span, if used at their current rate. So: no photo emergency. And as I was able in my 30's to afford the cameras that I wanted but couldn't afford in my 20's (Nikon F3, Leica R4sp, Leica M6 e.g.) and now in my 40's have been able to purchase the cameras that I wanted but couldn't afford in my 30's (Hassie, RB67, 8x10), I have no doubt that in my 50's I will be able to afford the cameras that I want today. Honestly, in the era of film cameras it would have been folly for me to be so worked up because I couldn't have what I couldn't afford at that instant.
I think the intensity of the current product desire has been heightened by short e-product cycles. Hey -- I skip three or four generations of computer chip upgrades and it hasn't broken me yet.
Ben Marks
I think the intensity of the current product desire has been heightened by short e-product cycles. Hey -- I skip three or four generations of computer chip upgrades and it hasn't broken me yet.
Ben Marks