Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2003/12/04
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Good point George, In fact the quality of anything remotely related to chips is a result of the attention given to the software code that runs them. A better chip, with higher specs, running bad software might likely not process as well as quality code on a lesser chip. Of course the faster & bigger chip is better in its processing potential. But the software is the key. Writing software cost tons of money, and since you can write software forever, time-to-market and budget issues usually calls the end of development before a version ships. Cameras, editing software, DV Cams, audio tools, and hi-tech guitar amps are now run by software. The knobs are just a controller interface changing digital input values. We live in a virtual world with all its consequences*. High-end analog Studer (Swiss recorders) are all but extinct, hand-made guitars are $5K and more, etc... And yes, it also means the M's as we know and love them will stop when Leica will stop making them (hopefully never). But at least they'll still be around, totally usable. What's the usable life span of a digital camera? Two years? The whole 'digital lifestyle' is basically a never-ending consumerism cycle, fueled by gadgets and supposedly important 'power-enabling' feature sets. This is now also the reality of the digital photographer. For the pro photographer, going digital means his gear will become a moving target. His tool(s) become(s) an evolving software-based octopus-like system, interfacing various modules from different manufacturers each looking eagerly to the next chip set, software revision or interfacing protocol that will enable technical progress and optical improvements in exchange for the next model or version. It is fine when it works, and - obviously - is a logical requirement in many production workflows. Leica is one of the few companies still producing hand-made, high-quality technical manual tools that last. That in itself, if you appreciate that tradition and those values, is worth wishing the best of success to Leica in all their endeavors, digital and 'traditional'. Luc *: planned obsolescence, pollution, shipping unfinished goods relying on future upgradability, market-driven product design, and announcing products (with variable specifications) much before they reach market. On Jeudi, décembre 4, 2003, at 09:50 AM, George Lottermoser wrote: > the software has every bit as much to do with image quality as the chip - -- To unsubscribe, see http://mejac.palo-alto.ca.us/leica-users/unsub.html