I must admit, despite having high hopes for the E-1, I'm not very
impressed.
I have always had to ask myself "what was Olympus thinking?"
Noise is higher than the competition. Resolution is lower than the
competition. And the PRICE is higher than the competition which
seems to deliver BETTER images.
Of course smaller sensor and smaller photo sites = More noise.
So then the question is - who will buy this camera?
I think the 4/3 idea is brilliant. The camera itself looks
gorgeous, and so do the lenses. But the image quality seems to let
it down.
Agreed shame they made some stupid marketing decisions
Perhaps - just perhaps - at around $1,500 or so, I could see why
one might by this camera, because you don't have to deal with that
awful crop factor as on a 10D or D100 or (if it turns out to be
decent) *ist D. But for over $2k this camera is unappealing.
What are you tallking about? With the Olympus, the lenses are
marked with 35mm Focal lengths and are effectively 35mm units with
a new mount.
You have to deal with a 2x FOV crop instead of a 1.5, 1.6 or 1.7 x
crop compared to a full frame sensor - That is even worse. Because
of the Physics of Optics, the resolution will be reduced compared
to a 1.5 crop as well. The digital sensor while limiting the Feild
of View, doesnt magically reduce the circles of confusion that
limit the resolution that a lens can produce. The lens design can
hepl somewhat but there are limits
The Oly is a 35mm type camera with a small digital sensor (Compared
to the D100 et al). The only reason that the bulk of people havent
realised that yet is because of the Marketing spin and the fact
that Oly doesnt have a current 35mm camera that they have based
their design on.
Nikon and now Pentax have released DX type lenses that are
comparable, the E1 is only unique in its lens mount system at this
time.
Oly will have to come out with a consumer camera QUICK, OR lower
the price equally quickly, otherwise I fear they may have blown it.
What's worse, if this camera fails, other brands will probably not
enter 4/3, AND it will probably discourage brands thinking of
coming up with their own digital "system" (Minolta?) from doing so
as well. That means we'll likely be stuck with crop factors (Canon
or Sigma) or half-baked digital-only lenses on 35mm lensmounts
(Nikon or Pentax). Not good :-(.
They should have done that first with a price point of about $800.
that might have ensured the critical mass for something like the
4/3 system to become a standard.
Regards
--
DCS-F707, Nikon CP 950,
http://www.pbase.com/bmorris65 ,
http://www.usefilm.com/browse.php?mode=port&data=13628