What I am saying is not subjective. It is an objective fact that Micro 43 is the smallest, lightest and most affordable "live" interchangable lens camera system on the market.
That I never argued. It is YOUR perception of value.
OK, fair enough then...there are likely to be subjective aspects to a term like "value". But I still maintain that OVERALL we
can say when something will be widely classed as better value.
For example, several months ago, the Olympus EM10-II was £235 and the Olympus EM5-II was £650. Now, the EM5-II is technically the better camera, but few would disagree that the EM10-II was the better
value at those prices.
And......that statement is partly incorrect. It (M43) is the cheapest in mirrorless but the APSC dslr game is the cheapest total system.
You're right, Canon APS-C DSLR can narrowly scrape in a bit cheaper than M43. I should have specified "M43 is the most affordable system
in mirrorless". Micro 43 is unquestionably the smallest and lightest camera system, though.
Jay dickman knows what he is doing. It proves that the perception of value is in the eye of the beholder. He is also paid by Olympus. So he not only can use the system well he doesn't have to think about the value part of the equation when using the pro 1.2 lenses that turn the value system for many upside down.
Jay Dickman could afford to shoot with any system he chooses. But he chooses Micro 43 because he says the light weight, live composite, IBIS, etc helps him get shots he would otherwise miss.
That is surely a reasonable benchmark of a "good enough" and flexible enough camera system for a beginner to intermediate photographer to invest in and to grow within?
And I don't dscount that it may be. So may other things. The Fujis with the kit may represent a better value to some vs the more expensive zooms in 4/3. Or apsc DSLR. Or Sony APSC, or even now FF cameras are somewhat in the dsicussion
As I admitted above, there is very likely an element of subjectivity in choosing gear. And for a few, the £650 EM5-II may represent better value than the £235 EM10-II. But OVERALL, the great majority would agree that the EM10-II was by far
the better value at those prices.
You can beat the good enough drum all you want. It will never change that 4/3 isn't good enough for everyone.
And I never claimed that it was!
But Micro 43
is the most affordable and ultra portable system in mirrorless. M43 is highly capable, excelling at travel and street photography. It boasts good enough image quality AND system flexibility to deliver multiple
National Geographic assignments. It is
more than capable enough for the large majority of photographers.
But of course it is not the best at
everything. No camera system is! Micro 43 is not as good for fast moving sports or moving subjects in low light as some other systems. And I have always stressed this to people needing those attributes.
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'Photography is not art. It's pressing buttons. People take it up because they can't draw.' Lord Snowdon