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LunaTique
01-17-2010, 05:14 PM
Is anyone following this technology.

http://www.wired.com/images_blogs/gadgetlab/2010/01/lumix_gf1.jpg
By Charlie Sorrel January 15, 2010


There’s a new camera category in town. It’s EVIL, and it’s going to kick your DSLR’s ass. EVIL stands for Electronic Viewfinder Interchangeable Lens, and is our favorite acronym for cameras like the Olympus Pen, the Lumix GF1 and the Samsung NX10. These small, mirrorless, finderless cameras can fit in a pocket and outperform bulky DSLRs. Here’s why your next camera will probably be EVIL.

They’re Small

DSLRs are bulky. Their design comes from the film days when the only way to see the exact image that would hit the film was to divert the light coming through the lens with a mirror and send it to a viewfinder. This mirror meant the body needed to be deep, and the lenses — further away from the film than those in a mirrorless rangefinder — were also bigger.

Now we can see what the sensor sees either on a screen, or through an electronic finder. With the mirror gone, the body can be a lot smaller, just like a compact digicam. This means you can carry it with you everywhere, fit it in a jacket pocket and be ready for *that* picture, wherever you are.

They Take Great Pictures

The trick with the new EVIL cams is that they have large sensors. In the case of the Samsung NX10, this sensor is the same size as you’d find in a DSLR, and the others use the Micro Four Thirds format, a sensor which is half the size of a 35mm frame, but a lot bigger than the pinkie-nail-sized sensor in a typical compact. This gives the high image quality and low-light sensitivity of a DSLR. And because they have large sensors, the depth of field is shallower, and you can throw a distracting background out of focus.

For most people, that is more than good enough.

You Can Change Lenses

Let’s be honest. If you’re not a pro, you probably bought your fancy DSLR, fixed on the kit zoom lens, and that was it. You probably spend 90 percent, if not all of your time, shooting with this on your camera.

With an EVIL camera, you can do this too. It’s more likely though, given the tiny pocket-sized lenses for these cameras, that you will actually carry them with you. Better still, with an adapter you can use all your current DSLR lenses on the newer, smaller body.

They’re Fast

Compacts have lost out to DSLRs by being slow. Slow to power up, slow to zoom and slow to actually respond to your trigger finger. EVIL cameras have fixed this, and are as responsive as any entry-level DSLR. Watch out which model you go for, though. The current generation still has some trouble focusing as fast as a bigger camera, although some models, like the Panasonic GF1, have this nailed.

They Don’t Scream “Look at Me”

With a smaller camera, you can blend in. With an EVIL camera, you can blend in and still get great shots. This combination of size and quality was the reason the Leica M series was the camera of choice for both street shooters and war reporters, from Henri Cartier Bresson to Sebastião Salgado. And because there is no mirror to flip, they’re quiet, too.

The Con

As a new category, the EVIL is still relatively expensive, and you’ll pay as much for a body and lens as you would for a prosumer level DSLR. For many, even pros, the size difference alone is enough to justify this. For everyone else, you could wait until the likes of Canon and Nikon inevitably enter this sector. Then prices will start to fall, and things will get really interesting.

Unless you have a specific use that these cameras can’t meet, or you need the very highest level of performance only a Canon 1D or Nikon D3 can bring, you have no reason to buy a DSLR. Instead, consider being EVIL. You might like it.

Photo: Jon Snyder



Read More http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/five-reasons-you-should-ditch-your-dslr/#ixzz0cuvBPArf
Story found in WIRED (http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/01/five-reasons-you-should-ditch-your-dslr/)

Vrod-Brad
01-17-2010, 05:26 PM
Got me thinking....

J. R. Weems
01-17-2010, 06:50 PM
SON IN ALASKA ASK ME ABOUT THIS LAST NIGHT-- I am not about to start over. Might do for some though. :)

EZE RIDER
01-17-2010, 07:27 PM
That is interesting. One thing is that I do not like framing my shots with the screen on the back of the camera. I prefer the viewfinder. I wonder how well an electronic viewfinder would work. Other than that it seems like a great idea.

tude
01-17-2010, 08:22 PM
I gotta learn how to use this old crap 1st:rofl::rofl:

Diamond Lil
01-17-2010, 11:36 PM
I gotta learn how to use this old crap 1st:rofl::rofl:

I'm with him. :eek:

J. R. Weems
01-18-2010, 09:31 AM
That is interesting. One thing is that I do not like framing my shots with the screen on the back of the camera. I prefer the viewfinder. I wonder how well an electronic viewfinder would work. Other than that it seems like a great idea.

My P&S S50 Nikon is like that. No viewfinder. In sunlight it can be a bear to frame a shot.--:(

Kodatech
01-18-2010, 10:05 AM
I have been following 4/3 and micro 4/3 technology for a while now. That looks to be a great camera, but I would disagree strongly that it could ever take the place of a DSLR or SLR.

Right now there is a very LARGE gap between the image quality of a DSLR and compact point and shoot cameras. These cameras were made to fill this gap, and I think they will do that MORE than adequately.

Pick one up and add it to my camera collection? I definitly would for those times when I don't feel like taking my DSLR into an amusement park, and the current point and shoot is too slow.

Pick one up to REPLACE my DSLR for my more "artistic" shots? Not a chance!

;)

echo3
01-18-2010, 11:12 AM
Sounds too good to be true. :confused:

Vrod-Brad
01-18-2010, 08:37 PM
Darn, I was hoping you'd all dump your DSLR's for cheap and I would make out quite nicely!

Go ahead all - DSLR's are old school...:hide

Diamond Lil
01-18-2010, 08:51 PM
I don't dump them. I throw them against garage walls. :eek:

LunaTique
01-19-2010, 06:00 AM
I am going to follow this technology closely I think if it can do what it says It will be a wonderful alternative.

Of course I want to see the price come way down aso.

My days of spending thousands of dollars on top of the line equipment are long since over.
These days I am looking for quality value and simplicity.

Michael Hetrick
09-22-2010, 11:29 PM
I know I'm dredging up an dead thread, but I can't help myself.

I think that the SLR form factor is simply more organic. When you hold and shoot with a SLR if just feels "right". I have an AWESOME little HD camcorder that is so small and light it is almost unusable. My point and shoots take great pictures but I don't like staring into the back of a lcd screen. Like I said, the whole experience of looking through a viewfinder at what you are going to shoot with a SLR is just more organic and natural to me. I consistently take "better" shots with the SLR than with any other form factor.

So there.

Bluesbird
09-23-2010, 06:59 AM
Darn, I was hoping you'd all dump your DSLR's for cheap and I would make out quite nicely!

Go ahead all - DSLR's are old school...:hide

:rofl::rofl:

Diamond Lil
09-23-2010, 08:24 AM
I know I'm dredging up an dead thread, but I can't help myself.

I think that the SLR form factor is simply more organic. When you hold and shoot with a SLR if just feels "right". I have an AWESOME little HD camcorder that is so small and light it is almost unusable. My point and shoots take great pictures but I don't like staring into the back of a lcd screen. Like I said, the whole experience of looking through a viewfinder at what you are going to shoot with a SLR is just more organic and natural to me. I consistently take "better" shots with the SLR than with any other form factor.

So there.

I agree.

But that could be our problem.

Michael Hetrick
09-24-2010, 12:35 AM
That is interesting. One thing is that I do not like framing my shots with the screen on the back of the camera. I prefer the viewfinder.

Amen brother. For me the experience of taking the shot is as much a joy as the finished product. Standing back staring at a dim LCD screen just doesn't do it for me.