I would like to remark that I did notice the analogy with autofocus and digital. In this respect this thread intersect that on the huge shade of tiny CLE. In my opinion the initial post of this latter is of extreme interest. Minolta had put a foot in an very charismatic territory, first with its cooperation with Leica and then with CLE. Had they kept developing CLE (it would have sufficed to add metered manual and AE lock) they would end with a killer product, that could be used like Ferraris are used to sell the terrible FIAT. Why they betrayed their best customers? Why this outrage of an unexpected announce of discontinuation only 4 years later for a product which is competitive still today ? (I was one of the victims. Those were my bitter photography days: I panicked at the perspective of not being able to afford completing the system with the much more expensive Leica lenses. And there was also much confusion on compatibility). So why? To concentrate resources to be the first on the market with the (button happy) whizbang autofocus 7000. Someone said that history has never taught anything to anybody, and that's why it repeats itself. I am thinking of what happened with SRL's where Nikon was not the first but had the killer product that allowed it to dominate. Minolta thought that being the first in that arena would allow it to dominate in turn. It was instead a major step toward its doom. Canon entered later with a better technology. I remember in those days people and magazines not discussing any issue of image quality, but rather time to focus. Canon had the fastest autofocus (I don't know about precision, but who minded?) and started to dominate. In the turmoil that followed many brands fell either leaving 35 or leaving the photographic business, in practice only the four major you all know remained, and in this group Minolta started its decline. Next chapter digital. Only two of the four are still kicking. The newcomers (Sony, Panasonic Samsung) attack Canon. And the winner is....
Best Regards
Pistach
PS the comments on Keppler are a candy