sf
Veteran
surprise
surprise
or not.
They mis identified their market. Totally. With the E300 and that other one. And actually, a bunch of their others too. The way I see it, there are three basic markets. The digicam crowd (p&s), the DSLR crowd, and digital back crowd. I think they were working on a niche market that was never really there, or which morphed back into the DSLR/digicam market when things got better.
That is just my opinion. I mean, when i consider Olumpus' digital endeavors, they don't stand out as being serious contenders in any market. Sony, Fuji, Canon have nailed the digicams totally. Olympus weighs in there somewhere reasonable. And Nikon probably ahead of Olympus. And the DSLRs are Fuji/Nikon/Canon, with Nikon on top, followed by Canon and then Minolta, then Fuji. Olympus' non-p&s products are sort of outliers, sort of on the fringes of the proven market, or what the majority of buyers want, and their image quality is not that good either. Fringe or niche markets like the one for the RD-1, the Lumix, etc., those are legitimate and are built on long standing markets from the film era. While Olympus has devotees, they didn't produce a camera that has any standing when compared with the others in the game. They didn't produce a DSLR and that market is preparing to take off. They missed that boat. Their p&s cameras are pretty decent though, but I am not a fan of that breed in general, any brand.
This is my opinion only, I have used the Oly digitals, and as far as the DSLRs (weakly applied categorization) go, there is nothing really there.
surprise
or not.
They mis identified their market. Totally. With the E300 and that other one. And actually, a bunch of their others too. The way I see it, there are three basic markets. The digicam crowd (p&s), the DSLR crowd, and digital back crowd. I think they were working on a niche market that was never really there, or which morphed back into the DSLR/digicam market when things got better.
That is just my opinion. I mean, when i consider Olumpus' digital endeavors, they don't stand out as being serious contenders in any market. Sony, Fuji, Canon have nailed the digicams totally. Olympus weighs in there somewhere reasonable. And Nikon probably ahead of Olympus. And the DSLRs are Fuji/Nikon/Canon, with Nikon on top, followed by Canon and then Minolta, then Fuji. Olympus' non-p&s products are sort of outliers, sort of on the fringes of the proven market, or what the majority of buyers want, and their image quality is not that good either. Fringe or niche markets like the one for the RD-1, the Lumix, etc., those are legitimate and are built on long standing markets from the film era. While Olympus has devotees, they didn't produce a camera that has any standing when compared with the others in the game. They didn't produce a DSLR and that market is preparing to take off. They missed that boat. Their p&s cameras are pretty decent though, but I am not a fan of that breed in general, any brand.
This is my opinion only, I have used the Oly digitals, and as far as the DSLRs (weakly applied categorization) go, there is nothing really there.