Thanks, chum. That's enough of a summary for me.
That bit about the focus ring is an interesting one. It must take a good deal
of research and engineering cleverness to get that sort of feel and feedback
right. It's a similar problem with cars and aircraft controls: what makes for
the most effective use of a control.
But you didn't mention Macs once ...
Chris
:-)
On 31 Dec 2009, at 14:06, Andrew Fildes wrote:
> I played with the new Ricoh for a while. Unimpressed.
> I had it with the 50mm equiv. macro. That was slooooooow shooting.
> Damn lens acts, well, like a macro in AF. Hunts through the whole
> range and misses the spot and goes through it all again.
> Manual focus ring is fly by wire so there's no feel and it keeps
> turning even after you reach the end of travel.
> And it misses the focus a lot - really a lot - in AF.
> We're thinking 2 seconds or more shutter lag!
> I have a collection of street shots with just the bum disappearing out
> of frame - I gave up.
> Oh, and the electronic finder is a bit like the GF-1 but nowhere near
> as good as the E-P2 finder.
> The other lens unit option at present is a zoom lens in front of a
> small sensor - may as well buy a GX200 for that.
> The next lens to be released is - wait for it - a 10x zoom on a small
> sensor. Ho hum.
>
> Considered opinion - they have stuffed up big time. Neat idea but
> released with the wrong lenses.
> They should have put it out with a wide prime on large sensor - 35mm
> or 28mm. Then they could have said, "Hey look, you can have the
> advantages of a Sigma DP-1 or 2, Leica X1, but still use it as a
> 'normal' camera if you want.
> Even the ancient Minoltasplit body compact which used the same idea
> in 2000 came with a standard zoom and (drum roll) a wide prime. Oh,
> and a 1 metre cable to link the body and lens units - neat.
>
> Great idea, lousy execution. Bugger.
> Of course it'll all make sense as soon as they release the projector,
> the printer, the GPS...if they ever do.
> One telling criticism I missed until later reading - in the past,
> when your sensor went obsolete, you uptraded your body for higher ISO,
> resolution, etc. and kept the lenses. A good lens could outlast
> generations of bodies. With this system, your dead/obsolete sensor
> takes the lens down with it. Marketing heaven, consumer nightmare.
--
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