Please don't alter my posts to give them your own emphasis.

The GM7 was not my invented name but was the source of two quite strong romours. The second one even hinted at a release date. It never apeared but right on the nominated release date the GX85 appeared. Not a word about the GM7 has been breathed since.

Either:

1) the GM7 was a code name for the GX85

2) the GM7 was a real name and by your reckoning the GM series was in the process of being canned and a new naming system was to be introduced - and has.

Despite much wrangling, and wishing against the obvious, the GM7 could never be as small as the other GM bodies as the brief seem to have been to make a camera as small as possible with all user conveniences included. When it proved imposisble to keep it much smaller than the GX7 the brief was likely changed to fit 5-way IBIS into a GX7 sized body.

I don't know why it is so hard for some to accept that the GM7 was a name that was publicised and never released as a model designation but was replaced to the day by the GX85 and no more has been heard of the so-called GM7. Did Panasonic have two models (GX85 and GM7) in prototype and completely excise the GM7 in favour of the as never rumoured GX85 instead? Quite possibly there wa a GM7 that never saw the light of day.

But nevertheless the timing says to me that the GM7 was real and was a single model that was morphed nto the GX85 before release date. Significantly Pansonic don't seem to model name badge their camera bodies and have not sone so for a while. It gives them some considerable flexibility to spray out regional model names with some abandon. I have no problem with that otherwise than to need to figure out what name is used colloquially on the dpreview forum.

Some seem to think that Panasonic invents a model naming chronology and then asks their engineers to design a camera that fits the model naming rather than the opposite.
 
This a GF8 successor, nothing to do with GM line.
I agree that this is a GF8 successor, but I think it has a lot to do with the GM line. If you look at the naming scheme (GX8, GX85, GX850) you get the distinct impression that there is nowhere in-between to put a GM successor. Maybe a GX855? I wouldn't hold my breath...
I am surprised by the many comments about a GM successor. I clearly remember last year reading an article about the products line panasonic intended to keep and develop and the name convention and clearly the GM line was dropped

this new GF9/ GX850 is clearly an entry level product aimed at a specific market audience.the rear back dial and the choice of micro sd cards clearly put it in a " mainstream device for selfies" product.

H
 
As the other poster said, the GM line just didn't sell well enough. You bet Panasonic would be continuing otherwise.

I think the GX850/GX800/GF9 is being thrown under the bus a bit- the JPEG engine will be Panasonic latest which isn't too bad anymore. No AA filter. Hopefully in-raw camera converter. Fast DFD focus. It really has a lot of the GM5 except the EVF.

Sure, build quality of the GM5 is better, but again, that made its price go higher and didn't sell.

But basically, I see this GF9 as a great camera for streets as much as Panasonic is pushing it for selfies/blogging. You can walk around like a medium format film view-type for framing, and I bet it's pretty snappy and fast (faster than the GM5). Oh, the RAW buffer also near doubled.
 
Not enough controls [...]
... even though there was space for more
but not basic enough and high priced
you can't possibly expect the GM and GF line to coexist at the same price point and use the tech in the GF at the same time.
indeed
Now that the GH line is introduced with a new sensor, the current 16mp will be relegated to the bargin entry level cameras and anything from the GX80 and up will use the new 20mp sensor from the GH and that includes a new GM.
amen to that.
 
Did Panasonic have two models (GX85 and GM7) in prototype and completely excise the GM7 in favour of the as never rumoured GX85 instead? Quite possibly there wa a GM7 that never saw the light of day.

But nevertheless the timing says to me that the GM7 was real and was a single model that was morphed nto the GX85 before release date.

--
Tom Caldwell
... or, maybe, marketing reined in the engineers: the GX85 hits the price sweet spot; a miniature version of it never would - particularly since Panasonic is already on the record (interview at imaging resource) that putting a pop-up evf (a-la-Sony) in the unibody of the GM series, posed daunting problems of structural rigidity.
 
No, the Panasonic made a silly decision, that's all there is to it. Their marketing department has convinced them that big is beautiful, small is cheap; or, maybe, it was not just their marketing department - what about reviewers and forum posts praising the "heft" and "substance" of this or that photo gear (and trashing the GM line, and every other effort at miniaturization along the way)?
Maybe we should start trolling the GH, EM1, GX8 etc threads and trash all those cameras as fit only for weight lifters.

Or, maybe, we should wait until Canon, who seems to be getting the message, starts attacking m4/3 cameras on the size and weight front - in fact the M3 and M5 are the same size with the GX85 and the EM5/10 and their consumer grade lenses are also the same size with the m4/3 equivalents. Now, that might make Panasonic (and Olympus) finally see the light.

:-x
So Panasonic could finally see the light that selling small cameras that nobody buys is what they should do? That selling a camera that loses them money is what they should do? How does that make any sense?

Okay, so we then all troll GH, EM1 and GX8 threads so no one buys those cameras. What good does that do? So no one buys Panasonic flagship cameras, no one buys GM cameras...do you really want everyone to just not buy any more M43 cameras? Is that what you want? Wouldn't that make you a troll? It certainly doesn't make you a fan of M43.

From your perspective it seems you think M43 should ONLY make small cameras...no matter if it actually sells or if it makes money or not. I highly doubt that makes any economic sense. Or am I misunderstanding your stance?
 
Not sure it will work - the GM series let the geni out of the bottle. There is now a fired up base of GM users who once they have seen what Panasonic can do with small camera bodies wish to only see highly capable and more sophisticated market targeted ones.
there was a relevant number of GM users...which, considering the GM series was an abject failure, there isn't. Panasonic catering to those GM users would be a huge mistake on their part. They had already made a loss with the GM series, but to then continue and make cameras catering to those GM users? Doesn't make any economic sense. There is just too few GM users, and by GM users, I mean, those that bought the GM at full price. Those that bought the GM at huge discounted price don't count because Panasonic would be losing $$$ for every sale at that point.
Well I don't know the sales statistics or how profitable the GM series was but Ricoh seems to be able to bang out the GRD/GR and presumably make some money out of it. Nobody could argue that Panasonic sold less GM cameras than Ricoh sells GR cameras. Maybe Panasonic did not make as much money as they would have liked to make - but that is quite a different thing and it is their call and they can choose to make or not make at their own pleasure. But to call it an abject failure - I think not and many of the designed for GM series parts are being re-used in the GF7/8/9.
and they produce the GR's with that in mind. Small batches at high prices. With the long historical cult following, they have the buyers to money off of it. Panasonic has absolutely no photographic history nor do they have any cult following to speak of. They need the volume in sales to compensate their expenses, and obviously they didn't receive those volume sales or else the GM series would still be alive. It's not a maybe. If Panasonic made as much money as they liked, the GM series would be alive. It's not. So obviously they didn't. Therefore, the line was a failed line.

Exactly what parts of the GM series is being re-used that hasn't already been used from their prior GF line or any other Panasonic camera that came before it?
The very reasonably priced GX85 may well be an attempt to move more committed users into the next size up band. I still think that the GX85 is just a renamed GM7and part of the overall strategy to move GM users up a body size scale.
Err...considering they are calling the GX80/85 a GX7 II, I can't see any connection to the GM series...
I get this repeatedly - with Panasonic's current naming strategies it would take a brace of philadelphian lawyers to figure out just what a model name meant. I am surprised that anyone could argue that a current model name had a lot to do with type association.
Umm...alright. Not a lawyer, not smart enough but I don't see where the confusion is...
I would rather look at the camera bodies themselves and see a continuing dna association.
Alright, lets do that.
But the real evidence for the GM series to be a shrunk GX7 is quite clear: the body style flowed - the touch screen interface was identical - the menu system and capabilities - virtually identical. The design brief for the GM series was and is obvious - take a GX7 and excise all unnecessary user conveniences to make a systmes camera as small as possible - so they tried a couple of variations. Then the brief was to make a lightweight cheaper version for mass appeal - the GF7. Now make us a camera with all the user conveniences put back in - call it the GM7 - try as hard as they could it had to be bigger than the GM series. Might as well include 5-way Ibis and try and keep it smaller than the GX7. Ah! We now have the GX8 - but the name is already taken. The GM has created some sort of notion that it is a small & toylike. Think of a new name - the GX85 is a half-way compromise.
Of course the touch screen intereface is nearly identical. The touch screen interface has been pretty much comparable between ALL Panasonic cameras (that had touch screens). It didn't start with the GM series, nor did it start with the GX7.

Same with the menu system which has been pretty much comparable from the very beginning with the G1/GF1/GH1 all the way to the current models. Sure, things were added, some things were tweaked but by and large the menu system has been consistent.

I'm sorry but the GX85, no matter how you may look at it looks like a direct update to the GX7. What part of the GM line went into the GX85 that the GX7 and GX8 didn't already have? Not the menu system as we know it's been shared between all of them. Same with the touch interface. Shutter system is totally new. EVF is directly from the GX7 (minus the tilt). Body style is directly from the GX7 (or LX series, or GX8 etc.). Size is pretty much identical to the GX7. I don't see what DNA part from the GM made it into the GX85 that wasn't part of the DNA of other cameras. What 'half-way' compromise?

Naming wise, again, GXx is the highend (GX8), GXxx the mid-range (GX85) and GXxxx the low end (GX850). I don't see any confusion with the naming.
On the other hand the Panasonic GF9 is not going to be the most appealing camera on the block for those that have no deeper ambition in photography. Surely that is a highly competitive travel camera market where there is a lot of competition including from other camera models made by Panasonic. These potential users are not necessarily going to rush Panasonic for the GF9 nor are they about to add a good number of Panasonic lenses to it. In fact most GF users who see themselves as users in the reflection of what Panasonic pushes hard as the attractive features of the GF9 are unlikely to even get to know how to dismount the kit lens.
Panasonic is out to make $$$ and the GF line is one of, if not, the most, $$$ making lines in their portfolio.
Possibly so but it seems a wild unsupported statement on your part especially when in a paragraph or two above your were stating that Panasonic was losing money on every GM series body that it was selling at an arguably higher price than asked for the GF9 even if reduced from the extortionate initial RRP asked.
Err, the GF line may have been a dud in the western world (as most of the Panasonic cameras) or even Europe but it's Panasonic's best seller in the south east, specially Japan. Take a look at Amazon Japan, or Yodobashi camera (one of the largest if not the largest camera chain in Japan). It's pretty common knowledge.

Well, okay, you are right, I don't know if every GM sold at drastic discount loses Panasonic money. What I do know is that selling the GM's at those drastic discounts didn't make them enough $$$ to compensate their investment in the GM line. I.e. GM line wasn't a money maker.
Catch-22 - frighten away the more serious users without attracting the more casual users to replace them.
If they aren't getting casual users to buy into the GF line, then Panasonic M43 in general is a huge failure as the GF line is one of their best selling lines.
If you say so - I am quite short on the facts to be able to say otherwise. This camera is also head on in competition with every smart phone in the universe.
Alright, let me clarify. And it doesn't really need hard numbers to be understood. GF line is one of Panasonic's best selling line. If the casual users weren't buying the GF line, then it would be a failed line. If the GF line is a failed line, Panasonic m43 division would take a huge hit. Other than the GH line, nothing else has been much of a hit. I believe the GX7 did alright and the G's did...well, not bad but not particularly good either. So what is left for Panasonic M43 line? They simply need the GF line to succeed.
Whatever it does it simply makes me more determined to look after my swag of GM bodies and stay with them for as long as they keep working well. If I am going to take this attitude and it proves to be more common then maybe a lighter-weight GF9 was not a smart decision as much as the premium level GX8 apparently did not hit a marketing spot either.
And why would bringing out the GF9 be 'not' a smart move? Panasonic does actually need to make $$$ from selling cameras.
I was only noting that Panasonic like any company can call the wrong shots from time to time. Succeeding is simply making more good decisions than bad ones. No problem with the GF9 in fact I am in no hurry to see a GM replacement even if it is as long as a couple of years away. What stunned me was the statement about replacing the GM line with the GF9 or was this merely marketing "puff"? As if there is anything in the GF9 that showed that the GM had anything much to do with it except re-use of internal components and the firmware. The whole thrust of what the GF9 is about is directed at selfie use and Panasonic make no bones in promoting that.
Well, directed at the selfie crowd is the right thing to do in my mind. The GF line is directed at the casual entry level camera user. They are rife with the selfie crowd. The selfie crowd is huge in Japan, look at the Casia selfie cameras in Japan. Directing the GF9 towards the selfie crowd is probably the best direction they could make.

As for the merging of the GM line into the GF9...yeah, well, that part does sound like direct marketing spiel. Panasonic seemed to have styled the GF9 to look more higher-end (without making it high-end) and has stayed relatively small...that's pretty much all I get that resembles the GM line.
This whole excercise was more about considering whether Panasonic had delivered good judgement in abandoning a camera type that dominated the niche it had effectively made for itself

I think that it is all not bad - no other company is likely to fill the niche that has been left unfilled. The YI M1 has come part of the way but not quite made it to full head on competition but strangely its body size and thrust are more direct competition to the GF9 than it would ever be to the GM series.

If indeed the GM series was slower selling than whatever was sold probably saturated the market for that exact type of camera and there is no reason to try and keep it functioning when only further price reductions could be effective.

The GM type is not a "fashion type" camera as the GF7/8/9 was and is and therefore users are likely to keep and use heir GM bodies for a more extended period. Hence the market would be more replacement or extra camera body than upgrade.

When it comes to upgrades there is not a lot that can be added to a GM type camera other than styling - exactly what the GF7/8/9 is all about - three styling changes in three years and not a lot of real innovation other than what can be supplied out of the ideas parts bin.

Contrast the GM1 and GM5 - one body style of each - no reliance on styling - just a functional camera - what really is there to improve except fiddle with the deckchairs.

Pansonic could at least release a firmware update for each that would add what firmware improvements that could be passed on to those GM users that are in there for the long haul.
What would be the use of dominating an empty niche? If the niche was big enough, then the GM line would have sold enough and the line would live on. It didn't. Should Panasonic continue to pump new investment and new products into that niche? In your mind, what would have been the 'good' judgement call?
 
This makes me wonder how on earth Sony manages to sell so many rx100 series cameras. They've all been released for close to $1000 and all 5 versions have sold well from what I've read.
Probably because the RX100 series are a fair bit smaller when you include the lens.
the third biggest camera brand.
 
No, the Panasonic made a silly decision, that's all there is to it. Their marketing department has convinced them that big is beautiful, small is cheap; or, maybe, it was not just their marketing department - what about reviewers and forum posts praising the "heft" and "substance" of this or that photo gear (and trashing the GM line, and every other effort at miniaturization along the way)?

Maybe we should start trolling the GH, EM1, GX8 etc threads and trash all those cameras as fit only for weight lifters.

Or, maybe, we should wait until Canon, who seems to be getting the message, starts attacking m4/3 cameras on the size and weight front - in fact the M3 and M5 are the same size with the GX85 and the EM5/10 and their consumer grade lenses are also the same size with the m4/3 equivalents. Now, that might make Panasonic (and Olympus) finally see the light.

:-x
So Panasonic could finally see the light that selling small cameras that nobody buys is what they should do? That selling a camera that loses them money is what they should do? How does that make any sense?

Okay, so we then all troll GH, EM1 and GX8 threads so no one buys those cameras. What good does that do? So no one buys Panasonic flagship cameras, no one buys GM cameras...do you really want everyone to just not buy any more M43 cameras? Is that what you want? Wouldn't that make you a troll? It certainly doesn't make you a fan of M43.

From your perspective it seems you think M43 should ONLY make small cameras...no matter if it actually sells or if it makes money or not. I highly doubt that makes any economic sense. Or am I misunderstanding your stance?

--
Hubert
My non-digital gear: Agfa Isolette, Ricohflex VII, Bessa R, Bessa L, Zorky 4, Fed 2, Konica Big Mini, Konica Auto S2, K1000, Yashica Electro 35 GX, Recesky
http://farm3.static.flickr.com/2034/2457111090_00eafbf8a4_m.jpg
http://www.flickr.com/photos/peppermonkey/
The 4/3 format died because it offered no size advantage over APS sensors; Nikon1 died because it offered no size advantage over m4/3. Now, m4/3 already has a user base and a comprehensive lens system, so it cannot die so easily. But it is still a niche. Do you seriously believe that it will survive in the long term, if it offers no advantage in terms of size and weight over its mirrorless APS competitors, particularly now that Canon is joining the fray? I don't. And, since I have already invested in the system, shouting loud and clear that overweight oversize bodies (and lenses - but that's a different story) are not the way to go is, as far as I am concerned, the only way to protect my investment. Premium or not premium, there is no excuse for bodies bigger than the GX85 or the EM5, it's as simple as that. So far there has been no m3/4 camera as successful as these (certainly not as successful as EM5), the GX8 seems to have been a vastly bigger failure than the GM line and the GH line sells reasonably well simply because there is no smaller alternative - so where is your proof that bigger is better?

But have it your way. The future will show whether you are right or I.
 
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Not the first time I've seen anti-photographer design from Panasonic, and it won't be the last. Panasonic isn't a camera company, they're a consumer electronics company—they push gadgets with features, and whether or not it's actually a useful tool for the target market is quite beside the point. I accept many of their cameras including the GH series as generally useful for most photographers, and Panasonic's video is world class, but no matter how much fancy processing they shoehorn into their cameras, no matter how much they push the technical envelope to make the spec sheet read better, their most basic photographic functions are limited compared to what even an entry level Olympus camera can do. For more info see this nearly 6 year old thread on limitations on flash operation in Panasonic cameras, absolutely none of which has been addressed in subsequent models: https://www.dpreview.com/forums/post/39049745

--
http://www.photoklarno.com
 
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The 4/3 format died because it offered no size advantage over APS sensors; Nikon1 died because it offered no size advantage over m4/3. Now, m4/3 already has a user base and a comprehensive lens system, so it cannot die so easily. But it is still a niche. Do you seriously believe that it will survive in the long term, if it offers no advantage in terms of size and weight over its mirrorless APS competitors, particularly now that Canon is joining the fray? I don't. And since I have already invested in the system shouting loud and clear that overweight oversize bodies (and lenses - but that's a different story) are not the way to go is, as far as I am concerned, the only way to protect my investment. Premium or not premium, there is no excuse for bodies bigger than the GX85 or the EM5, it's as simple as that. So far there has been no m3/4 camera as successful as these (certainly not as successful as EM5), the GX8 seems to have been a vastly bigger failure than the GM line and the GH line sells reasonably well simply because there is no smaller alternative - so where is your proof that bigger is better?

But have it your way. The future will show whether you are right or me.
I never once said so.

4/3 died because it couldn't compete with APS sensors from an IQ point of view. Simple as that. If it did compete, size wouldn't matter as long as it wasn't 'bigger' than APS sensored cameras. The fact that the lenses were huge and the cameras not that much smaller (if at all) was just the nail in the coffin.

But that's besides the point. The point I was making was that the GM line simply did not sell, so why shouldn't they shut that line down? What economic sense is there to continue a line that simply was not bringing any return on investment? GM1 didn't sell so they revamped and brought out GM5 and that didn't sell either...so they should continue and bring out GM7? GM9? Does that make sound business sense?

The ONLY way continuing the GM line makes sense is if, from the beginning, the line was to be Panasonic's statement/showcase line. One that they know is going to lose money but they make it anyway, just to say, this is how good a Panasonic M43 camera can be, this is how small a Panasonic camera can be. Otherwise, there is no sense to continue a line that is not making money.

GH line will continue, not only because there is no smaller alternative but because it's also drastically (ridiculously) cheaper alternative to anything out in the market. The Gxx line seems to be doing alright so I see that continuing. And who knows, we may never see another camera like the GX8. The GXx line may continue but it may be quite different from GX8.

In general, yes M43 line needs to be smaller than the competition but not ALL models needs to be smaller. As long as enough models of worth is smaller and M43 generally can continue with the perception of smaller bodies/lenses, it can survive. I would LOVE for the GM line to continue as I would love to get one that size. That doesn't mean I don't understand why Panasonic stopped that line.
 
And, since I have already invested in the system, shouting loud and clear that overweight oversize bodies (and lenses - but that's a different story) are not the way to go is,
You can shout as much as you want. It does not make it right. Ok two simple facts :

For some people, small means GM size or something similar.

For others, they prefer a bigger size because they have bigger hands, they want more controls and dials on the camera, they use large lenses for which a tiny camera body is an odd fit just to list A FEW reasons why small camera bodies may be ignored

different people have different needs. One same photog may also like the idea that he or she can alternate using in the same brand or system two bodies of different sizes based on the occasion.

All of the above brings about the other FACT : Having A CHOICE IS ALWAYS BETTER.

having so many options means you get more clients, mire brand recognition and other advantages
Premium or not premium, there is no excuse for bodies bigger than the GX85 or the EM5, it's as simple as that.
Ok stated like that it is simply ridiculous !
So far there has been no m3/4 camera as successful as these (certainly not as successful as EM5), the GX8 seems to have been a vastly bigger failure than the GM line and the GH line sells reasonably well simply because there is no smaller alternative - so where is your proof that bigger is better?
But have it your way. The future will show whether you are right or I.
NO again you are so entangled in your twisted logic that you are misinterpreting the facts.iam quite certain that most people who use the GH cameras do not want them to be much smaller

Finally one should look at both Panasonic and Olympus lens line up to see that both brands have understood this marketing logic even if you are unable to do so. Indeed both brands have a developed lens offer to fit BOTH size ranges of their bodies offering.Meaning whichever way your preference lies ( smallish bodies or larger ones) you have enough references to work with in both cases

Showing again that having a choice is ALWAYS better

H
 
GH line will continue, not only because there is no smaller alternative but because it's also drastically (ridiculously) cheaper alternative to anything out in the market. The Gxx line seems to be doing alright so I see that continuing. And who knows, we may never see another camera like the GX8. The GXx line may continue but it may be quite different from GX8.
In general, yes M43 line needs to be smaller than the competition but not ALL models needs to be smaller. As long as enough models of worth is smaller and M43 generally can continue with the perception of smaller bodies/lenses, it can survive. I would LOVE for the GM line to continue as I would love to get one that size. That doesn't mean I don't understand why Panasonic stopped that line.

--
Hubert

Very well put. Lots of common sense injected in this thread and it looks like it needs it :)

I do not know that for a fact but I am quite confident that we will see a GX9 this year with the new shutter from the GX80/GX85 and other improvements seen in recent models

I remembered reading a series of interviews from Panasonic execs early last year saying that they were renaming and developing FOUR models lines

GHx (like in GH5)

GXx (like in Gx 8)

Gx (like in G80)

GXxx (like in GX85)

GXxxx (or apparently GF for some markets)

That s already a LOT and most people would agree that it is the most they can reasonably do

Harold
 
Having A CHOICE IS ALWAYS BETTER.
I don't see much choice for those who prefer small cameras. There was no choice at all before the GM line and there is no choice now. And no, the GF line is no substitute. So, yes, I will shout as loud and clear as I can. If you like it bigger and heavier, feel free to attach a brick to it.

...btw - what makes you so sure that GH buyers would not be even happier if it were the size of, say, the EM5 (which, by the way, is more or less the same size with a Nikon FE/FM - a classic loved by pros and enthusiasts alike, back in the old days); and, sorry, but the "big hands" argument is just a lame excuse - I cannot recall anyone using it back in the film days and I fail to see why going digital makes a difference.
 
Having A CHOICE IS ALWAYS BETTER.
I don't see much choice for those who prefer small cameras. There was no choice at all before the GM line and there is no choice now. And no, the GF line is no substitute. So, yes, I will shout as loud and clear as I can. If you like it bigger and heavier, feel free to attach a brick to it.
So you say but mahy reasonable people will disagree. Such cameras as Olympus em5 or em10, panasonic gf of gx80 are small cameras..

Sure you may prefer even smaller but there is a time where size prevents having enough room for controls and dials. On this subject, i think this is also why the GM is being dropped:

At launch , the GM was attractive for 2 audiences :

the yuppies crowd who wanted a camera for their travel snap and selfies small enough to be carried in a ladies purse ( asia market for women, hence the colored bodies)

the enthusiastic crowd which wanted something better than a smartphone but are not willing to carry a normal size m4/3 body even a small one.

The problem is that the GM line got old very quickly for BOTH these targets. The Gm was not friendly enough for the selfie crowd , hence the GF line with the selfie designed Lcd screen

For the enthusiastic most realized that the controls were too limited. The rear wheel is very clumsy and unpractical REGARDLESS of the camera brand and model ( this is why it is disappearing for lost serious calera models) and the diminutive height of the GM models was leading to very unnatural choices like a 16:9 LCD screen on a 4:3 sensor ratio camera or a very tiny, almost useless evf on the Gm5
...btw - what makes you so sure that GH buyers would not be even happier if it were the size of, say, the EM5 (which, by the way, is more or less the same size with a Nikon FE/FM - a classic loved by pros and enthusiasts alike, back in the old days); and, sorry, but the "big hands" argument is just a lame excuse - I cannot recall anyone using it back in the film days and I fail to see why going digital makes a difference.
You cannot have it both ways by saying that all m4/3 rds models should be around GM size or around that size and use the em5 size to speak of the GH. I have met or read over 100 people using a Gh camera and none of them listed the calera size as a problem

if you had big hands, you would not say that regardless of film or digital.

For me a camera size like a GM is useless and it feels clumsy, maybe because I shoot mostly in manual mode. And have normal size hands. The optional grip of the gm as i remember did not make a big difference for le and it would not have solved the lack of physical controls

for you it works. Maybe you have tiny hands, or do not need to access controls much, or use mostly small lenses.. whatever it works for yoy

it does not mean that this should be the experience of others

Harold
 
Having A CHOICE IS ALWAYS BETTER.
I don't see much choice for those who prefer small cameras. There was no choice at all before the GM line and there is no choice now. And no, the GF line is no substitute. So, yes, I will shout as loud and clear as I can. If you like it bigger and heavier, feel free to attach a brick to it.
Exactly which other manufacturer offers a miniaturized high end camera? Who has the option to buy a very high end camera that you can carry in your pocket?

And why don't they?

Panasonic tried it and failed. So they reinvented their mini cam as an entry level value cam, and packed it with lots of features. This may or may not work for them, but we know for certain they didn't sell very many GM1 and GM5 cameras at full retail price.

This latest version is better than their GF8, and priced lower too. If the GF8 was a hit, this one should be an even bigger hit.
...btw - what makes you so sure that GH buyers would not be even happier if it were the size of, say, the EM5 (which, by the way, is more or less the same size with a Nikon FE/FM - a classic loved by pros and enthusiasts alike, back in the old days); and, sorry, but the "big hands" argument is just a lame excuse - I cannot recall anyone using it back in the film days and I fail to see why going digital makes a difference.
Of course you are right about that. The whole point of having a system with a smaller sensor is smaller bodies and lenses. If you don't have smaller bodies and lenses, then you have compromised for no gain.

But I think you are wrong when you say there isn't much choice. We have plenty of choices. You just can't have a flagship camera that fits in your pocket. If you need pro level build quality, weather sealing, lots of dials and buttons, and blazing fast processors, then you are limited to a GH5 or an EM1 II.

If you want a Nikon FE sized camera, then M4/3 has some pretty good ones, including the GX8, EM5 II, and Pen F. M4/3 currently offers models ranging from 269 grams up to 725 grams. With quite a few in between.

And I also think you are wrong if you say lenses are too big. SOME of the high end lenses are very big, but so are everyone's highest end lenses. But there also are some incredibly small lenses too.

Having choices is a good thing.
 
For the enthusiastic most realized that the controls were too limited.
Agreed - but there is actually room for more controls, if only Panasonic chose to put them there (for example: a 2nd wheel, instead of the focus mode selection dial)
leading to very unnatural choices like a 16:9 LCD screen on a 4:3 sensor ratio camera or a very tiny, almost useless evf on the Gm5
Agreed again - but Sony has proven that you can fit a pop-up evf in a tiny body; not easy to implement (Panasonic conceded that they tried and failed), but not impossible
...btw - what makes you so sure that GH buyers would not be even happier if it were the size of, say, the EM5 (which, by the way, is more or less the same size with a Nikon FE/FM - a classic loved by pros and enthusiasts alike, back in the old days); and, sorry, but the "big hands" argument is just a lame excuse - I cannot recall anyone using it back in the film days and I fail to see why going digital makes a difference.
You cannot have it both ways by saying that all m4/3 rds models should be around GM size or around that size and use the em5 size to speak of the GH.
As far as I am concerned the pro models could easily be EM5-sized (there is a heat dissipation problem, after all, if you wish to shoot 4k video) and the semipro/enthousiast models GM sized
if you had big hands, you would not say that regardless of film or digital. For me a camera size like a GM is useless and it feels clumsy, maybe because I shoot mostly in manual mode. And have normal size hands. The optional grip of the gm as i remember did not make a big difference Maybe you have tiny hands, or do not need to access controls much,
I would consider my hands as normal sized. I prefer to shoot in A or S mode with exposure compensation (I concede used to shoot manual back in the film days, and I guess I might do the same, if there were any digital cameras with 3 control wheels, but only Fuji and Nikon Df offer that option). And the GM cameras suit me just fine.
or use mostly small lenses.. whatever it works for yoy
Manual focus is a different story; focus peaking barely replaces the split prism/microprism of my beloved Nikon FE2 (remember it?), never mind the useless OVFs of contemporary DSLRs, and, besides, my eyesight is not what used to be, thanks to presbyopia, so I prefer autofocus these days.

As for lens size, granted, I have never used anything bigger than a Panasonic 14-140ii (well, once, I have played with a friends Zeiss manual cinema lenses, but that's a different story), so I have no opinion how it would work with a Pansonic 100-400. But I can assure you that a GM works just fine with a 14-140.
it does not mean that this should be the experience of others
Of course not; but since I am the one losing out by the death of the GM line (incidentally: I bought it full price, because it was the camera I was waiting years for) you will excuse me for finding those different experiences irrelevant.
Harold

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Having A CHOICE IS ALWAYS BETTER.
I don't see much choice for those who prefer small cameras. There was no choice at all before the GM line and there is no choice now. And no, the GF line is no substitute. So, yes, I will shout as loud and clear as I can. If you like it bigger and heavier, feel free to attach a brick to it.
Exactly which other manufacturer offers a miniaturized high end camera? Who has the option to buy a very high end camera that you can carry in your pocket?
First of all it depends on what you call a high-end camera ? I do not think of the Gm1 as a high-end camera

It is well built , provides good image quality but this does not make it a high end camera

What are YOUR factors to decide what is a high end camera
And why don't they?
Maybe because there is not a market for it nowadays, at least not for the cameras WITH interchangeable lenses
Panasonic tried it and failed. So they reinvented their mini cam as an entry level value cam, and packed it with lots of features.
and it certainly calls for larger clientele base
Harold
 

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