PentaxBronica
Member
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2011
- Messages
- 365
- Format
- 35mm
If you look at the release dates of popular '80s and '90s SLRs you rapidly find that 'twas ever thus!
Prices are probably about the same in real terms too (as in comparing how many times you could fill your car up or go out for dinner for the same amount as you're about to pay for a camera).
There's also the fact that selling cameras which will last fifty or sixty years isn't going to keep your business going for long, as your customers will only come back when it wears out unless you can convince them that whatever you're offering now is an improvement. That's what bit the car industry and caused the "cash for clunkers" and scrappage schemes. They cracked how to make reliable cars which didn't rust to nothing or fall apart, and saw their new sales nosedive about ten or twenty years on as customers realised that the new models didn't really offer anything more, and were often more prone to breakdowns due to the sheer quantity of electronic gubbins.
Prices are probably about the same in real terms too (as in comparing how many times you could fill your car up or go out for dinner for the same amount as you're about to pay for a camera).
There's also the fact that selling cameras which will last fifty or sixty years isn't going to keep your business going for long, as your customers will only come back when it wears out unless you can convince them that whatever you're offering now is an improvement. That's what bit the car industry and caused the "cash for clunkers" and scrappage schemes. They cracked how to make reliable cars which didn't rust to nothing or fall apart, and saw their new sales nosedive about ten or twenty years on as customers realised that the new models didn't really offer anything more, and were often more prone to breakdowns due to the sheer quantity of electronic gubbins.