No, it isn't the same and I'm sure you know better. E.g Fujifilm acknowledge the X10 issue first and promised to work on a solution. In a second step they offered a solution that fixed the light blobs definitely by swapping the sensor. Nikon didn't do anything comparable.
I agree. The Nikon announcement was weak and waffling. It was less than a clear admission of a problem and took no real ownership of the problem or responsibility for making it right. It was phrased to minimize, not recognize there was a problem.
It was more like a whiny acknowledgement of a kid caught with hand in the cookie jar, that he might have been stealing a cookie.
It reeks of weak leadership and indecisiveness. It shows no respect or concerns for their loyal customers who put out a big chunk of hard-earned cash to buy a product from a company they trust and believe in.
If Nikon came out and said "We admit we have a problem. Hthe fix. We apologize. We will make it right for every person who bought a D600 and we'll try to avoid this in the future." If they responded in that manner, I'd have some respect for them.
But all we got is "well, ok, maybe there might be tiny bit of dust... no big deal, it's kinda normal, right? We'll take a look at your camera." Whine. Shuffle. Look at floor. Cringe.
Well, the 5D was released in 2005. The service advisory for a dropping mirror was only made in 2009. Fuji's S2 pro was released in 2002, and the service advisory was only released in 2005. Even for the X10, it took Fuji several months before they acknowledged the problem and promised to look into it.
D600 was released Nov/Dec 2012, and the service advisory came out in Feb 2013, 3.5 months after release. In my book, I think they did good. Yes dust is an issue, but less than an issue with a mirror that dropped out, or a sensor that died. And Fuji's cost for replacing that sensor cost around SGD 1500 IIRC, and many had to get the camera fixed on their own cost after warranty before that service advisory came out.
After all every single D600 release is still under warranty (provided you buy through the proper channels). I've shot landscapes with dirty sensors before and yes, I would ask, what's the big deal? It is an issue, but not a terribly serious one. Especially now that Nikon has acknowledged the problem, and apparently has a solution in place. I think people need to relax around here and have a little patience here.
And to ageha, I say again, it is the same.
For folks who are risk adverse and/or want everything perfect, maybe it is not a very good idea to be early adopters. Maybe in the future you should wait it out 6 months to a year before getting that new release. Which is what many folks are doing actually, waiting it out.
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