Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/12/04

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Subject: [Leica] Thom Hogan's photo predictions for 2004
From: Tim Atherton <tim@KairosPhoto.com>
Date: Thu, 04 Dec 2003 16:07:46 -0700

These are fun
http://www.bythom.com/2004predictions.htm

and include

"Leica's digital back for their SLR doesn't make it to customers in 2004.
It'll show up in prototype form at Photokina and be much talked about, but
it'll appear to be too little and potentially even later...That won't stop
Leica from producing it or their existing customers from buying it. But
Leica will be hurting big time financially by the time it appears. And
exactly how they're going to attract new customers moving forward will be
suspect, as they're behind in the digital image quality race."

and

The new Nikon F6
"The third new Nikon DSLR will shake up the industry. Last year I predicted
the appearance of parts of the F6 (the autofocus system ended up in the
D2h). Well, this year I'm going further, saying it will appear fully.
Essentially, the F6 will be like a medium format camera in 35mm size. The
main component will simply be a light-proof box with lens mount, shutter,
and mirror mechanism. Perhaps that part will also have a power supply in it.
But everything else (and perhaps the power supply) will be modular. You'll
have your choice of bolt-on film or digital backs and your choice of
viewfinders. Backs and viewfinders can be interchanged mid-roll/mid-card.
I'll go further and point out that Nikon will use the Olympics in Greece to
launch this hybrid. If I had to guess at price...."

(prototypes of this have been played with elsewehere...)

and

"At least two traditional camera companies fold (perhaps they get acquired
instead). Will it be Mamiya, Pentax, Minolta/Konica, Leica, Hasselblad
(though the name might live on via their Japanese partner), Rollei, Bronica,
or Horseman?...

..Agfa (and perhaps Konica) closes or sells their film plants. Markets with
negative growth aren't the ones you want to be in. Perhaps the
Icahn-produced Kodak film spinout will buy them ;~). Oh, didn't I mention
that? If Kodak doesn't produce the results that Wall Street wants to see in
the next six months (and they won't), Carl Icahn and company, who've been
buying up Kodak stock, will move to split Kodak into chemical, film,
digital, and medical businesses and/or sell portions of the business..."

and see how he did with 2003:

http://www.bythom.com/2003predictions.htm

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