Nescio
Well-known
Why do so, if the future is named China?😛Make the grips and buttons sized for American hands
Why do so, if the future is named China?😛Make the grips and buttons sized for American hands
( On another point--I see fdigital calling the 14-35mm F2 zoom a "dud,""useless when it came to autofocus,"and had been abandoned.
Well, that's all certainly news to me. I see it's still listed on Olympus' website, so I can only assume they are still making and selling it. And as for my 14-35--it's one of my favorite lenses, and I consider it worth every penny of the $2200 I paid for it. Call it my utility lens--it's one I slap on my camera when I'm goin out shooting for just about any situation.
And I don't what fdigital means when he says it's "useless with autofocus." I don't seem to have any problems with mine, and I use it a lot in situations of low light and high ISO's. Shot last night with it at a blues show, and it locked on focus pretty quickly--the images look tack-sharp...)
Oh, I think everyone, including Thom, forgot that the higher-end PEN is due this year... maybe we should hold off our verdict on Olympus' seemingly drunken direction and see how this PEN turns out.
Kudos. All the companies could really, if they truly understood their customers.
Put an Android/iPhone user interface in place of the crappy stuff we accept. Put WiFi and Bluetooth in the camera. Write DNG files. Make the grips and buttons sized for American hands, or better yet, make the camera left or right-handed. Remove the focal plane shutter and make it silent. Put a AA-powered wireless fill flash on a dock so we can hold it in our hand or reduce the size of the camera (like the old XA). Give us a professional, weather sealed EVF camera and a handful of fast prime lenses.
Our cameras are like 1979 Walkmans. Someone needs to make an iPod.
Fuji with X100 has shown everyone that people are sick and tired of how digital cameras look more than actually how they perform.
There's already been plenty of gushing about the look of the PEN. But what I see a lot of people asking for nowadays is a built-in finder and better high ISO performance.All Olympus needs to do is look back at its history of making pretty cameras and incorporate that in their DSLR and compact designs.
To some extent, I agree with you. No one's expecting an m43 camera to match a 135 format DSLR. But many m43 enthusiasts would like to see performance equivalent to a mid- or high-end DSLR. m43 bodies still have a gap to fill as far as dynamic range is concerned. And to a lesser extent, high ISO performance.The digital market is no longer about affordable digital cameras, or high ISO, or even image quality, those have been pretty much covered,
I really hope they don't place their emphasis on styling. The cameras already look stylish enough. They need to boost the feature set (built-in EVF, faster AF, etc). If Olympus built a camera equal in everyway to my GH2 but with in-body stabilization, I'd buy it immediately.The camera makers have taken notice of X100 and the response to it from advanced amateurs (the big spenders) and it will go against common sense if they do not follow up with their own cameras. Olympus has a history of being adventurous with their designs, so i won't be surprised if they come up with something exciting in the next year or so, but even then their XZ-1 is quite a digi p&s, but unfortunately it will be forgotten in the rush for mirrorless compacts.
I'm not tuned into digital gear. But Olympus, in the past, has given, as far as I'm concerned, the public more good cameras across all user levels (within 35mm) than any other company. It is too bad if they fail now.
http://www.43rumors.com/thom-hogan-what-is-the-future-for-olympus/
I think this is right on the money. By any reasonable calculus, Oly has released four nearly identical camera bodies in a year and a half, with no forward movement whatsoever. They really need to introduce something good for this standard. Something as good as the GH2 that looks and feels different from it.
fdigital: re your comments about Nikon and Canon "spanking" the Olympus:
I have neither the money nor the inclination to hop around from system to system. And for me, the 14-35mm is fast enough. If you say so, the Nikons or Canons may "spank" the 14-35 in focus speed, but I can't help wondering if in real life , we're not splitting hairs here. As someone once said about Rolls Royces, "power is sufficient." So for me, re Olympus, focus speed.... is sufficient. I mean, I ain't shooting still lifes here, as you might note from my post......
Re the ISO: you might be right. I dunno. All I know is that I like the way my images look at 1600 ISO (beats the TMax 3200 I used way back when), and frankly, I can count the number of times I have had to use any ISO higher than 1600 on one hand...using only one of my fingers. (Thank God for that fast Olympus glass.🙂)
Oh, I suppose such high ISO speeds as Canons/Nikons have are cool, but how many of really have to use them? Kinda like how often do we really drive a car at its top end? Makes for nice bragging rights, but most of the time we really don't have to go there....
And again, I had no focus issues with either the lens or the body. Seems funny to me: bought the ZI and everybody seemed to be bitching about what a piece of crap it was, how this, that, and the other was wrong with it.....and I had no problems. Bought the M8, same amount of noise about what a rotten design it was......and I had no problems with mine. And here we are with the Olympus 14-35, and it's the same game, different day....
He says after all is said and done, the factory people do what they want, ignoring the requests from pro users.
It's not they are being ignored, it's that the company has to be concered about whether enough of the market wants something, or if the market is willing to tolerance an increase in price to get that feature. Pros may want feature X, but feature X may cost an extra $1,000 and then the pros won't buy it. "Well, I like feature X, but not at an extra grand."
...I think the market is moving towards mirror-less large sensor cameras. Olympus was first in the market, but they seem to be losing out to Sony...