Well, the first impressions are beyond my expectations.
I was concerned at my ability to use a rangefinder to get accurate focus, and also my ability to get on with a mostly manual camera after years of "P&S" with Nikon (D)SLRs.
These concerns were unfounded, the Epson felt natural in my hands and intuitive to use. Out of about 50 shots I guess I had a couple with poor focus, three lens cap shots, and just a couple more where the frame lines had caught me out.
Perhaps the greatest tribute to the design though is that my father (a rangefinder veteran from the '50s who probably hadn't used one since the early '80s) picked it up straight away and took a shot. If I hadn't told him I don't think he would have realised it was a digital camera. He's a complete luddite when it comes to technology and would never go near my SLRs through fear.
For me, the camera was a joy to use. I felt more in tune with it than I did with my SLRs, it felt part of me. I took different shots to those I did with my SLR, saw things in a different way. And the large viewfinder is like going from academy ratio to Cinemascope!
The joy extended to the 40mm f/1,4 Nokton - a very different lens to even the best Nikon AF primes (e.g. 24mm f/2.8). Lovely to have a precise focus ring to manually focus with. Lovely also to have click stops. And the simple addition of a distance scale really helped as well - a lot of hyperfocal focussing practice went on.
In my real life I'm a computer person, so I hate spending too much time in front of one during my leisure time. I've used a lot of RAW processing engines (e.g. Capture, Capture NX, Aperture) but I really liked the simplicity of PhotoRaw. Logical to pick a file from the left, apply some adjustments, and place it on the right for processing.And it ran reasonably fast on my laptop.
So, overall, I'm in love. For a long time I had been bored with photography, unhappy to lug all my bulky SLR gear around to take the same tired shots.
There are a few shots in my gallery, really just messing around with the camera rather than concentrating - hence the car and flower shots!
http://photos.kiloran.com/c1057208_1.html