Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/01/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hello everyone, Good to see the good old LUG is still kicking. I've been away from photography for a while working on my startup company: Twango. The little photography I've been doing over the last year or so has been with my 1Ds, which is a beast of a camera. On my last trip, it spent most of the time in the hotel safe, while I carried the little C-Lux1 in my pocket. Plus, the 1Ds has gathered enough sensor dust to start a sizable hobby farm and I have never been able to clean it all out. I've ordered one of those Arctic Butterfly things in a last ditch attempt to make the thing usable again. I put my order in for an M8 some time ago and just got the call that my number is up. It's one of the new batch with all of Solms' finest German-engineered IR/WB/color cast band aids in place. Now I have to decide whether to actually take delivery of the thing. I've been reading some of the threads here, on dpreview and on the Leica site and the situation doesn't seem encouraging. I have gone from enthusiastic anticipation of this new camera to utter disappointment. Many of you know me from years past here on the LUG and how much I enjoy photography with the M cameras in general. I'm tempted to take my M8, but it's difficult to get a rational viewpoint out on the net. You ask some hard questions and the fanboys jump in on you, accuse you of trolling, etc. I am hoping that my old friends here on the venerable LUG will be able to help me decide. You folks are the only ones I can trust for sage advice as I haven't had a chance to use an M8 myself, except for a few minutes at the dealer one night. The test DNGs I shot looked ok, but the JPGs, even at the highest quality setting were horrible. Thanks for any comments or advice. I think at this point, I'd even like to hear B.D.'s opinion. ;-) My very best regards to the LUG family, --Jim Laurel Co-Founder, Twango http://www.twango.com/jim