Chuck Albertson
Well-known
Wow! They certainly came in under the radar with this one. They must make the reviewers sign the NDA From Hell.
I'm about to dump my film leicas and lenses if this can be had for a decent price
I guess I didn't understand the metaphor. I assumed you were talking about priorities/importance.
Something to consider before you (plural) jump over to digital. All digital files can corrupt for no apparent reason. I am sure that everyone on this board has a music CD that will no longer play, or a word file that will not open. I bought a Seagate external memory about three months ago and loaded about 1,200 digital pictures on it. I plugged it in last week, and it will no longer fire up. There is a real possibility that all those files are lost and/or some are corrupt. HRd drives crash and burn with no warning. Film can be stored safely for a very long time with minimal effort. Digital files of any type may not be retrievable, for a variety of reasons, rendering them useless. This is still the Achilles heel of any digital system.
It's a business model metaphor - often used in the technology industry, but obviously derived from the shaving industry. It means you want to sell one thing (a camera body for example - usually relatively cheaply - or even give it away free) so you can get people to buy lots of something else (a lens) that only works in your razor and that you can sell lots of at a high price. Once they buy into the razor (body) they have to buy the blades (lenses).
/T
Something to consider before you (plural) jump over to digital. All digital files can corrupt for no apparent reason. I am sure that everyone on this board has a music CD that will no longer play, or a word file that will not open. I bought a Seagate external memory about three months ago and loaded about 1,200 digital pictures on it. I plugged it in last week, and it will no longer fire up. There is a real possibility that all those files are lost and/or some are corrupt. HRd drives crash and burn with no warning. Film can be stored safely for a very long time with minimal effort. Digital files of any type may not be retrievable, for a variety of reasons, rendering them useless. This is still the Achilles heel of any digital system.
Not for anything, but digital files should be kept on a mirrored RAID at a minimum, and preferably a separate copy kept off-site...
Something to consider before you (plural) jump over to digital. All digital files can corrupt for no apparent reason. I am sure that everyone on this board has a music CD that will no longer play, or a word file that will not open. I bought a Seagate external memory about three months ago and loaded about 1,200 digital pictures on it. I plugged it in last week, and it will no longer fire up. There is a real possibility that all those files are lost and/or some are corrupt. HRd drives crash and burn with no warning. Film can be stored safely for a very long time with minimal effort. Digital files of any type may not be retrievable, for a variety of reasons, rendering them useless. This is still the Achilles heel of any digital system.
It looks like a great replacement for a Hasselblad system with that big sensor but for everyday phtography I'm sticking with my film M bodies. The last thing I want to do at this point is invest in a whole new set of lenses.
This is an absolute necessity. I'm amazed that folks are amazed when a hard drive fails. It's inevitable - although, if you are lucky, you will have to be as old as Moses to see all your hard drives fail.
Bill