Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/09/29

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Subject: Re: [Leica] Leica's Future
From: "Mark Kronquist" <mak@teleport.com>
Date: Tue, 29 Sep 1998 16:58:10 -0700

Citizens Photo had a nice CL outfit for sale when I stopped by for lunch
today Portland Oregon 503 232 8501  (just a satisfied customer of theirs)
- -----Original Message-----
From: Raimo Korhonen <raimo.korhonen@pp2.inet.fi>
To: leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us <leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us>
Date: Tuesday, September 29, 1998 12:24 PM
Subject: Re: [Leica] Leica's Future

Couldn´t agree with you more - except it must not neccessarily be bigger -
I´m a big fan of the late CL which I had and sold and of Minolta CLE which
I wish I had, but I heard from somewhere - the net probably - that they do
not service CLEs any more.
Raimo
photos at http://personal.inet.fi/private/raimo.korhonen
myös suomeksi

- ----------
> From: B. D. Colen <BDColen@earthlink.net>
> To: Leica-Users@Mejac. Palo-Alto. Ca. Us
<leica-users@mejac.palo-alto.ca.us>
> Subject: [Leica] Leica's Future
> Date: 28. syyskuuta 1998 15:53
>
> Let me make a few heretical comments in response to the Leica's future
> thread...
>
> Looking at the numbers of cameras and lenses sold, and looking at the
kind
> of observations Ted made about the scarcity of the products in the
> professional pack, it is foolhardy to suggest that today's Leica is
anything
> more than a niche product. Yes, there are some pros who swear by the Ms
or
> the Rs and produce stunning work with them. And certainly there is a
> fanatically dedicated group of "amature" users.
>
> But if the company is to survive, it is going to do so by producing
> equipment that melds the best of the past with the best of cutting edge
> technology. What does that mean? A rangefinder with a 4000th to 8000th
top
> shutter speed, multi-mode auto exposure and true spot metering, and the
> traditional M lens mount that will allow the use of virtually all the
> current and older lenses.
>
> Yes, this camera will be bigger than the current M, and yes, it will be
> noisier. However, on a trip with my daughter this weekend I was playing
> around with her Olympus OM4 and noted that that REFLEX body, with what is
> reputed to be THE best metering system in any pre-autofocus camera-
> including a true spot meter that can average up to eight seperate
readings -
> is neither as high, or wide, as the M6 (reflex housing aside) and feels
like
> it weighs a bit less.
>
> It is possible to get a great deal of technology into a small, light,
quiet
> package. It is possible to come up with a multi-magnification viewfinder
> system. It is probably also possible to come up with an autofocus system
> that would allow true manual RF focusing.
>
> Will such a camera appeal to the LSM diehards - of course not. Will it
> appeal to the M6 users? Probably to a large number of them, as a second
body
> if not as a first. But the more important question is whether it would
> appeal to many of the EOS/F5 users, and I, for one, believe the answer to
> that question would be a resounding "Yes!" Those who have become wed to
the
> modern technology would be able to make use of the best of both the RF
and
> TLR worlds - with the best of modern technology. And Leitz might then be
> able to live on into the 21st century as a healthy company, hopefully
still
> producing a "traditional" M body along with the new camera or cameras