microcosm
Senior Member
OMD ? Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark ? haa
A lot of young people here will not know what on earth is that... that would be our "secret"... LOL!
OMD ? Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark ? haa
I think if I am going to be unemotional about things, Pentax is fast on its way to a niche market doling out medium format cameras and Ricoh tries to find some way to handle the mid end with a modular camera more suited to the existing Pentax market. That is some wishful thinking, but they have do something radical to survive.
Olympus problem has been the lack of direction, and they dug themselves a rug from which they cannot escape from. They ought to have gone for APS-C with M4/3 while allowing for the use of 4/3 lenses, but they chose not to.
Nikon users once asked the same question until D3 and D700 appeared. If they had not done that, maybe they will be like Pentax and Olympus, not being able to survive on their own. So, it's not going FF that matters, but survival for Olympus. With m43, I don't think they have any chance and the imaging division will eventually be worthless.
No surprise that a lot of good/serious/professional photographers are basically finding that the current 'smallish' format cameras today are giving good enough o/p for 90% of needs.
Just love Kirk Tuck (Good writing and long winded, with lots to say on the thoughts of phototaking rather than just about gear and he's and avid swimmer too )
The Visual Science Lab / Kirk Tuck: Thinking about gear made me think about gear.
Steve Huff for his 'real world' camera reviews, love for cameras and rather straight thoughts on the cameras he uses (which like many of us, no straight best camera)
Mirrorless Mania Which one should I buy? Nikon 1, Micro 4/3, Sony NEX | STEVE HUFF PHOTOS
If they do less marketing, they won't be doing any marketing, as they didn't do for years.
Why shouldn't they do a 135 format-sized sensor in an OM-sized body? Surely, they could find a way. The light gathering capability would be awesome and they'd bring back the big, clear, bright viewfinder that the OM-series promised and delivered instead of the small, dark viewfinder that we saw in the E-4x0 etc.
I wouldn't mind if they left out most all of the automatic bits to make a digital version of my favourite OM-1N.
Almost did... project OM-N1. But somehow some monkeys burnt the plans one night after too much sake...
JK,
Do you think both Pentax and Olympus will make it with whatever they have been doing? Times are bad and the Japanese economy is not that sound anymore. Ricoh may have other plans for Pentax and if nobody comes up to swallow up Olympus, their digital imaging will go first because it's worthless. I am not talking about Size or IQ or whatever they are doing, but doing something different to capture some attention of investors, otherwise, bye, bye. I predicted that Kodak will not survive the digital onslaught some 20 years ago if they did not get their infra-structure right when they went into digital imaging. Companies who were too analog base found it difficult to change with times, so you are right that those who did not react fast enough would be left behind. Canon began investing in digital imaging in the eighties and in the early nineties, most of their office equipment and document management systems went digital. l know them very well because I was invloved in that industry for about 30 years. Many have been asking why Canon refused to get invlove with EVIL, less so, m4/3. Knowing Canon, I am sure they have the next 5 generations of products already in prototypes and waiting for the right time to launch. Just watch out for their G1X.
I wonder if they'd like me to run the place with my mixed Japanese and American styles. Everyone would know our business. :bsmilie:
I know that they want to play it safe quite often, as the Canikon people usually do, but other than micro Four-Thirds and the point-and-shoot lines, they haven't played it safe much in the digital age. They've usually been on the stupid side and after seeing ratings on their point-and-shoot cameras, I don't think they've been too clever.
microcosm said:A lot of young people here will not know what on earth is that... that would be our "secret"... LOL!
Now, I really want to have coffee with you! I am buying!
Their resources must be seriously stretched if they could not incorporate that in the recently released EP3.43 Rumors | Blog | (FT5) A 16 megapixel m43 sensor for the new digital OM camera!
A new tweaked 16mp sensor, perhaps same as g3 and gx1? This should delight many...
43 Rumors | Blog | (FT5) A 16 megapixel m43 sensor for the new digital OM camera!
A new tweaked 16mp sensor, perhaps same as g3 and gx1? This should delight many...
For some reasons I think you should send your resume to Olympus USA. Olympus really needs some folks who knows what they hell they want. I think the old man back in Japan is turning senile. A different man whom I spoke to in 2004. Sigh...
NazgulKing said:I won't be surprised that most FF sensors have dead photodiodes, just that they make sure it meets some minimum criteria and they stopped there. If the sensor has too much by way of defects, it gets binned down and sold as APS-C.
ageha said:How is that supposed yo work? ;-)
NazgulKing said:It's the nature of the business. Even your CPU chips has some level of defects. Take graphic chips as an example. A chip will have x number of cores. In a batch, they will find that some chips have varying number of cores that work. They will just sell the different chips with different number of working cores at different prices. Only those that fall below a limit won't be sold.
Eh? They would probably start with trying to get the best FF sensors from a silicon wafer, before cutting out the APS-C, and finally just the random photodiodes that can be sold for other uses.Well, you forgot that a FF sensor has different dimensions than a APS-C sensor. They can't simply cut it to the right dimensions.