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- Jan 16, 2006
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This article was posted pretty recently... there's some interesting choices and observations there, probably good to stir up a little controversy.
Like... not one, but two film cameras, including a large-format one. Another pick is a medium-format digital back. And even a point-n-shoot! (Their pick can be debated - they went with the Canon SD870 over the Fuji F40, just barely, because of the F40 lacking true IS.
Some of the picks are not surprising - the Nikon D300 (certainly the APS-sensor camera to beat at the moment) is #1 and the D3 is #4. But there's some very kind words for the Pentax/Oly crowd with their D300 paragraph:
Based on that, it probably won't be a surprise that the #2 and #3 pick are a tie between the K20D and the E3.
In case there's not enough controversy yet, they explain the Pentax/Oly tie as being about lenses.
Let the debate begin.
Like... not one, but two film cameras, including a large-format one. Another pick is a medium-format digital back. And even a point-n-shoot! (Their pick can be debated - they went with the Canon SD870 over the Fuji F40, just barely, because of the F40 lacking true IS.
Some of the picks are not surprising - the Nikon D300 (certainly the APS-sensor camera to beat at the moment) is #1 and the D3 is #4. But there's some very kind words for the Pentax/Oly crowd with their D300 paragraph:
Although image quality is not quite as good as the K20D's, and the basic body style is not quite as pleasingly put together or as much of a pleasure to use at the Olympus E-3...
Based on that, it probably won't be a surprise that the #2 and #3 pick are a tie between the K20D and the E3.
In case there's not enough controversy yet, they explain the Pentax/Oly tie as being about lenses.
Olympus has become to the digital age what Leica was to the preceeding generation and Zeiss to the generation before thatthe world's leading lensmaker.
No company has Pentax's range of purposed-for-digital single-focal-length lenses, however. Both Carl and I are using Pentax's stunning new 35mm DA Macro, which we plan to do an extensive joint post about sometime in the coming two months or so. Suffice to say that we both agree it is, in Carl's words, "really something special."
By contrast, Nikon's and Canon's large but jumbled lens lineups are a hodgepodge of good and not-so-good, old made-for-film and new digital-specific, IS-enabled and not, pro and "consumer," full-frame and reduced-frame, that can ultimately be confusing and even frustrating.
Let the debate begin.
