I still can't believe that Minolta is charging for this D7 upgrade.
They're still working out the business model. This is completely
unprecedented; consumer (and even prosumer) cameras have always
been treated as throwaways by the manufacturers. If you want the
new features - get the new model. noone has offered any form of
upgrade path before.
Firmware upgrades should be free when you spend that much on a
camera.
And engine upgrades should be free when you spend forty times as
much on a car, I assume?
It has nothing to do with how much the original item cost. I
challenge you to mention one - just one - other consumer/prosumer
camera at the same (or lower, or about twice or so) cost that
offers free upgrades to functionality, incorporated from next
generation models.
Hopefully someone will put the upgrade out on the net for
download.
Hopefully not. This will only make Minolta regret their decision to
create the upgrade in the first place, and we'll never see anything
like it again.
Hopefully a lot of people pay the small amount of money to take
advantage of this unprecedented upgarde path, and Minolta will make
more of them available in the future. I would be very happy if I
can pay $50 to get a big chunk of D9 (or whatever comes next)
functionality into my D7i. If people put the upgrade on the net
instead of buying it (what's $50 to get a next generation digicam?
Very little compared to the $1k to buy a new one) Minolta are
unlikely to do that.
Not to mention all other digicam manufacturers. If this move is
received well, they will be forced to offer similar deals - and if
they do, everyone will benefit. Then prices of upgrades will drop
and probably become free.
This is a first. Noone else has done this. Ever. Please support it
so we get more of it. It's in
our interest.
--
Jesper