Mark: Frames for 24 and 28 lenses cropped on the M8 (32, 37mm equiv.) are already included in the camera itself, no? (Or so we hear and surmise).
Why make the accesory finder more complicated/large than it already is to duplicate them? This finder is for use with this lens - with 3 frames to match, in each of the two formats, minus 1 for the overlap at 21mm = 5 frames total.
Chris N. Electronic framelines would only 'exist' when the power is on - I'd want to be able to estimate framing without burning up battery power keeping the LCD lines running in between shots.
If photographers want zooms, they should buy a Nikon D80. Rangefinders are different, and trying to turn them into pseudo-SLRs is like trying to teach a pig to sing: It wastes your time and annoys the pig.
8^)
Me - I'm gonna see how well or badly my C/V 15mm does before I make up my mind about the Tri-Superwide-Elmar (ASPH - I assume, although the markings aren't visible). And also compare it to my fixed 21.
I have a suspicion that the very long length means it is a telecentric digital-friendly optical design, and may show significant improvement in the corners vis-a-vis darkening, fringing, and resolution - then again, it may not be enough to persuade me.
I'm sure there is a lever, as with the 28-35-50 TE, to signal the camera which focal length has been chosen. Moot as far as internal frames are concerned, but it will let the camera/software/EXIF know, in combination with a fixed Zebra-code, whether 16, 18, or 21 was in use.
Rico: But you would need hyperfocal marks for ever aperture at every focal length - plus an explanation in the instruction book for people used to full DOF scales. And HF marks are only useful if you are including infinity in your required DoF. Lots of people just want to be able to get everthing sharp from 1 meter to , say, 5 meters, without needing the whole range out to infinity (and a smaller f/stop and slower shutter speed).