Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/07/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]This LUG consists of people who claim to be interested in Leica cameras and who own a computer. One of the reasons that there is anything to discuss about cameras and other mechanical objects is that they sometimes fail or break or misbehave. In most manufactured goods there is a hierarchy of quality, ranging something like this: * discount * consumer grade * high-end consumer grade * professional light duty * industrial and professional heavy duty * military and aerospace We spend a lot of time discussing quality issues in cameras. Given that computers are what link us all together, and that increasingly, computers are where we store our work, I think it is appropriate to discuss computers here as long as we don't get carried away by it. Dell computers are no more or less reliable than any other consumer brand, and, like all big manufacturers, Dell makes several different quality levels. Since this is the Leica Users Group and not the Point-and-shoot User's Group, I see no particular benefit from discussing, or demeaning, any brand of consumer-grade product. The variance in manufacturing at the consumer level is such that all statements of the form "My computer works really well" or "Brand ABC is awful and I will never buy one" are specious. Your own personal experience with any consumer-grade product is not meaningful. Aggregate statistics are meaningful, though, but the LUG is not the place to do that aggregation. There are publications such as "Which Computer?" or "Consumer Reports" that do this evaluation. Read them. They contain actual facts. However, given that digital photography is becoming a way of life, and that the reliability of computers is paramount to the viability of professional digital photography, I do believe it is appropriate to discuss (in a non-emotional way, without namecalling) the availability, technology, and usability of computers built for the professional and industrial market. That is a small enough market that the identity of the manufacturer matters. So, here's a new rule for the LUG: it's not OK to discuss consumer brands of computers. It is OK to ask for help in dire circumstances. And it is not only OK but encouraged to talk about professional and industrial brands of computers, as long as those computers are capable of running Photoshop and image database software and driving printers. Brian Reid LUG Saloon keeper