F
Frank Granovski
Guest
No! Really? You too?I once got flamed on P.Net
No! Really? You too?I once got flamed on P.Net
Frank Granovski said:Probably not a neo Nazi but rather someone with a poor command of English. One would hope.
Socke said:come to think of wording and political correctness, if one is so sensible snip
The Nazi history is everywhere here. When I drive to my office I cross the "Langemark Strasse" which was named after the WW1 battle at Langemark/Belgium. Of cause it was named so in the 1930s by you guess who :-(
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t :-(
Huck Finn said:Tom,
I tend to think of certain "families" of lens designs that Zeiss makes. In order to adapt a basic design to different focal lengths & different lens speeds, modifications have been made to the basic design. And then further modifications are made to achieve improved corrections for aberrations, etc. The further removed in time from the original design, the more modifications are in evidence.
Change in the number of elements does not in & of itself mean asubstantial change from the basic design. It has been done from the beginning. In 1931, Ludwig Bertele patented his new Sonnar design for Zeiss as an f/2 lens, consisting of 6 elements. In 1932, the very next year, he introduced a 7 element, f/1.5 Sonnar with a redesigned rear component to provide the correction for spherical aberrations required at the increased f/1.5 aperture.
Huck
Socke said:come to think of wording and political correctness, if one is so sensible he shouldn't use APX emulsions and Rodinal developer as Agfa once was part of IG-Farben which supplied the KZs with Zyklon B and "employed" slave labourers which were brought to work in Ford and Opel(GM) trucks and organized with the help of Hollerith (IBM) punch card computers. Don't forget Mercedes, Porsche and and and.
Mazurka said:Oddly enough, I just received a 2005 pamphlet on the complete range of Zeiss camera lenses (still and movie) in yesterday's mail. Should I OCR-scan it and post the whole thing here, or do I just post the medium format stuff?![]()
bobofish said:snip
I just don't see Zeiss having the money to invest in a direct competitor body to Nikon...the film market is dying for all intents and purposes, and the digital scene isn't hardly past puberty. At this point, Zeiss is most likely doing whatever they can to maintain a foothold in the camera lens biz.
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I gather they were depending on Kyocera to perform this end of the R&D. The N was the not-to-successful result. One only has to read a portion of the dpreview Canon and Nikon threads to realize the technologies are highly non-trivial to achieve. Zeiss' strength is in optics. Sounds like they can make better use of it by selling lenses to fit various existing mounts.
It is not clear to me who designed the view-rangefinder in the new ZI camera. The corresponding part in the M's is the heart of the camera and the product of optical know-how as well as bit of trial and error (the latter refers to the flare syndrome in M finders, which I gather has finally been solved; my M6 still flares but this may be fixable). Based on their optical expertise I would thus guess that CZ designed the range-viewfinder in the ZI. Anyone know the details?? I am hoping that Putts does a tear-down comparisosn between the M and ZI finders.![]()
Tom
Bryan Lee said:Why not? Its a long time til the 18th of January, Maybe it will help with some more wild guesses for the ZF line. I was just wondering if the ZF will look anything like the SINARON, what do you think?
bobofish said:I don't want to beat my point into the ground, because I may well be wrong. In fact I hope I am wrong, I like competition, especially when it leads to quality.
However, I think the biggest reason why Zeiss wouldn't release an F-mount body (or Sony for that matter) is that they would open themselves up to a big lawsuit.
Even if the patents on the F-mount are gone, if they come out with a product even vaguely similar to a Nikon (autofocus, good metering, etc.) then Nikon will just sue them to keep them out of the market. And the likelyhood of Nikon nodding approvingly of a competing F-mount body is, I'd say, slim. Even if the lawsuit didn't bring anything, it would bring a lot of negative attention to Zeiss, as a copycat not capable of succeeding on their own...in addition there would be the legal fees.
If they are going to make F-mount cameras, I'd be willing to bet that the lenses will come first, and then, after a good long wait, then a pensive offering with a camera.
By the way, doesn't Sony make the sensors for the Nikon cameras? I'm curious if Sony would be willing to take a gamble that their potential F-mount slr's could rake in enough cash to offset a possible loss of their Nikon deal. But of course, since there aren't many competing sensors, maybe Nikon themselves are the real weak partner these days....?
copake_ham said:And I guess I am the only one who still thinks that the ZF lens line will simply be a new version of Cosina F-mounts with Zeiss QC oversight. Like the new ZM lenses. Not to be "mule-headed" but I will stick with that.
Maybe when the "final answer" (a better phrase by far) is revealed we will all get back to talking about RF on the RFF!
Socke said:RJ, I'm here!
"Lösung" is solution and "Auflösung" is a solution, too.
That's a bit tricky, "Lösung" is usuably used for the solution of an equation and "Auflösung" for the solution of a riddle. "Auflösung" is a bit more final than "Lösung", in a sense of the only correct solution if more than one is possible.
You can translate "Auflösung" as well as "Endlösung", which was the term coined especialy for the holocaust, to "final solution".
So "auflösen" means solving a riddle as well as making a solution by dissolving a solid substance in a liquid.
Edit:
In german we use -ung like in english -ing for the gerundium. As usual in german, there are exceptions ....