Originally posted by Jed
So exactly what year are you living in now?
That just puts the rest of your post into perspective really... :bsmilie:
He's in 1956. Post-war.
Regards
CK
Originally posted by Jed
So exactly what year are you living in now?
That just puts the rest of your post into perspective really... :bsmilie:
Originally posted by ckiang
He's in 1956. Post-war.
I will be happily taking pictures with my HF-DSLR with the DX lenses, just as I was happily taking pictures with my manual focus Nikkors when the AF revolution was going on.So when full frame SLRs take over the world, what are you doing to do with these special lenses which are nothing more than stop gap measures designed for instant gratification in the digital world?
Yes, we can definitely expect FF-DSLRs to drop in price and be more readily available, but correspondingly, I will also expect HF-DSLRs prices to drop. And guess where the MAJORITY of the volume and profits are going to come from -- i am willing to bet that the market for HF-DSLRs like the D30/D60, D100, S1/S2 will explode when the price point is less than US$1.5K (and we are not far from that price point today). Like you mentioned, can encounter DSLR users everywhere in Singapore today - thats because HF-DSLR pricing is in the "affordable" range. Expect that to continue and increase in fact.You can expect only a short delay before full frame SLRs become widely available and affordable. That development will make your investment in DX lenses moot, just like those IX Nikkor lenses.
Today, can already get noise-free images from the current crop of HF-DSLs. As for resolution, how much is enough or how much is too much? I find 6Mpix enough even for printing to A3 size.Noise free images, tons of resolution, some pple are beginning to wonder if the 1Ds is now lens limited.
eh hello?? what do u mean "going back"? And don't compare consumer digicam fingernail-sized CCDs with the DSLRs 24x16mm CCDs/CMOSes - its like comparing a one-room HDB flat with the Istana leh .... end up confusing ppl only. And IMO, i think can still squeeze in a couple more Mpix into HF-DSLR before noise limitations occur - see the doubling of resolution from the D30 to D60 and the D1 to D1x with essentially the same imager size.And here we have Nikon going back to smaller sensors. Wait, what did we learn from small sensors in consumer digicams? the more megapixels you squeeze, the noiser the image gets.
hey, you do realize that makes you look like the flame-thrower wielding joker from the intro action sequence in Lethal Weapon 4.... make the rubber boots yellow and you look like the PCK from hell.... :bsmilie: :bsmilie: :bsmilie:Originally posted by Red Dawn
:devil: *dons firemen steel helmet, abestos lined hazard suit, oxygen mask, rubber boots*
Originally posted by Wai
hmm...which means those who have both Nikon film body and Digital body will probably ended up buying two sets of lenses...and also the market for DX lenses should be smaller becos majority are still using film body....which means buying and selling in second hand market won't be that easy
Originally posted by Wai
hmm...which means those who have both Nikon film body and Digital body will probably ended up buying two sets of lenses...and also the market for DX lenses should be smaller becos majority are still using film body....which means buying and selling in second hand market won't be that easy
G lenses are not fully electronic - the aperture stop-down is still activated by a mechanical method using springs and levers.Originally posted by denizenx
G lenses are full elec ones huh?
Originally posted by Darren
G lenses are not fully electronic - the aperture stop-down is still activated by a mechanical method using springs and levers.