Incorrect. What you don't know is that those in the professional end of the game quite often spend vastly more than amateurs do on gear over a working lifetime. Most of us have no choice but to update regularly and frequently due to the levels of abuse metered out to our equipment. Next, Singapore is an abnormal society when it comes to Photography, no other location on earth that I have been to (and that's a hell of lot mate), has such a high proportion of Pro level bodies in amateur hands, even in Japan I'd suspect the levels are lower (educated guess). As camera manufacturers do not release sales figures for individual bodies your statement is untennable at best and Bull$hit at worst. The average sub 1.5K amateur body probably contributes about 1/20th of the money to the R&D budget of a professional body and I'd estimate that globally 85-90% of professional bodies and long lenses are in the hands of professional photographers, not in the hands of amateurs.
Secondly I do not feel smug about it. It peaves me no end to see people who would normally be intelligent rational beings fall in the the most basic trap of the photographic industry, gear wankerism. It doesn't just apply in the amateur ranks, there are plenty of professionals who fall in to this category as well.
Thirdly, you need to learn a bit about the way a person advances in photgraphy. Gear measurebation has been with the industry (including amateurs) as long as it's been in existance. However since the advent of the Web the level of wankery has increased exponentially each year. The reasons for this are simple and closely follow the accepted "ages of reason". I'm going to assume you don't know what they are and educate you a bit about it and photgraphers in general.
When you are absolutely new you know nothing so the whole world is an eye-opener. This applies to any new hobby or indeed facet of life. It's nearest equivalent in the ages of reason is the baby.
Next comes the aquisition of basic thinking skills and some spatial skills. This is akin to a newbie photographer making their first attempts at photography and coming to grips with the fundamentals such as exposure, lighting concepts and the basic technology of shooting.
Skip a couple of stages and you get to the age of youth. This in real life is where everything is very black and white, you THINK you know it a lot and your reasoning is it's either right or wrong. This is the same as the gear wankery / measurebator mindset with one noticable difference. Knowing about equipment specifications is the easiest part of photography. Comprende, it's simple, it's black and white and it doesn't require you to know very much about anything, just be able to regurgitate other views and accept them as the truth and nothing but the truth.
Few amateurs (and some professionals) ever really get much beyond the gear wankery stage, those that do discover enlightenment, where they come to realise the greatest truth of the whole photographic world. Equipment doesn't matter a damn 99.9% of the time. What matters is your ability to extract the maximum out of what you have got and any resonable quality camera or lens is capable of exquisite work in the right hands.
You are the one who needs to learn some respect, not me.
Capice?
first of all, I am not the one who prioritises good photography over an interest in techonology. I do not attach a price tag to interest like you do. I respect what people like. This is an EQUIPMENT forum. gearheads come here to get their fix. So do people interested in photography yes. but this is where tech specs are discussed.
"What matters is your ability to extract the maximum out of what you have got and any resonable quality camera or lens is capable of exquisite work in the right hands"
You know what? you didnt get the point of what I was saying. all i am saying is this. this may peeve you, but respect that people have different interests and dont go around waving your pro photographer tag and saying they are 5 year olds who need to grow up. sure, there is no way anyone can find fault in the oh-you-need-to-learn-how-to-take-pictures statement. But why are you finding fault with the oh i love techonology and i am a gearhead rant? You think taking photos and being happy about picture composition is superior to an appreciation of specs and techonology? so whos the smug one? who is calling who a bunch of 5 year olds? who needs to learn respect? this is a difference in opinion. no need to call names. appreciate others' interests before you jump in. if it peeves you. say so. there is scarcely need to insult others
second,
"What you don't know is that those in the professional end of the game quite often spend vastly more than amateurs do on gear over a working lifetime. "
that is true, but like you said, both you and I dont have sales figures. for every professional other there, there are maybe, 10, 20 hobbyists and that number is increasingly rapidly as people become more affluent and prices come down. this is an educated guess, but looking at the line up, and how camera makers are scrambling to capture the masses, you get at least an inkling of the idea that at least that is a crucial area of the market
Third
"The reasons for this are simple and closely follow the accepted "ages of reason""
the ages of reason... listen. dont go telling people what to do or what reason is. and besides this isnt about reason. it is about people appreciating tech specs in a equipment forum. it is about different interests. respect that instead of sinking down to name calling.
so who is the imperialistic one? waltzing in here and calling everyone 5 yr olds?