Not really interested in the camera, but...
From Leica's pov, they sold the popular (so I heard, and the 2nd hand market is good for them) 28-35-50 tri-elmar, which compared to other m mount lenses was big, slow, and expensive.
I don't see how this is different? Compared to other lenses its big, slow, and expensive.
IMHO, its the sort of camera I'd get if I was older, and coming back to photography after growing up using M's. Imagine you have been out of the loop for 20 years, start looking at cameras to get, you used to have a leica, ahh, there it is.. sold. All familiar, no crazy modes to get lost in etc... No comparisons to other brands required, because you used to shoot with a leica, but don't need/want to spend $10k now for an M. Its a good way to get these people who have money to spend again back into the Leica the brand, and then sell them an M is a few years.
Just my 2c.
I can see it doing as well, if not better than the X1/2 did/does.
Michael
While a Tri-Elmar would have been a pretty cool concept, one selling point in the X Vario marketing seems to be HD video. A fixed-lens consumer video camera (digital camera or camcorder) pretty much needs to have a zoom lens to be taken seriously. Certainly most people who like companies to come up with differentiated products would have welcomed it, but a zoom lens that is not really a fully functional zoom can easily get denounced as a gimmick. I therefore think a different lens concept with the same size and speed would only slightly have changed the tone of the criticism.Indeed, had they made it a 'Tri-Elmar' and not a 'zoom', they wouldn't have had the criticism they have had.
Who would want the Mini M now that there is the D-Lux 6 G-star Raw.
Great pics Jim. Much better than I was expecting.
I just don't get how they get anyone to buy something that is technically not as good as cheaper cameras out there. Even if I had 5 million dollars I would choose an x-pro1, rx1, nex 6/7 or even a small dslr over it. You can buy an X-pro1 with zoom for half of that and it has a built in hybrid viewfinder AND you can change the lens.
I can understand that to some extent. I agree it's more powerful than the Digilux, but even it had an EVF, if I recall correctly.
I suppose there's no point griping about it; the thing is what it is. It's just disappointing that given two markets - serious photographers and luxury consumers - both willing to pay Leica's price for the model they want, Leica chose the latter. That likely would not have been the case at the height of the M series' popularity.
The company's responsibility is to its shareholders, though, and not to us, and serious photographers are probably both less profitable than, and outnumbered by, the luxury consumers.