Andy K
Member
[...]
How will Nikon-Canon be able to get punters to buy a new camera every 3 year as they have done during the last decade?
Is there a major paradigm shift in the 35 mm SLR future?
No need. Thanks to the late Mr Adams I already know that. 42.
r
Mats
steelneck:
I'd be careful about using wristwatches as an example.
A very large percentage of people in their 20s and younger:
1) either do not wear a watch, or only wear one as a "fashion accessory"; and
2) cannot read time off an analogue timepiece's face (they require a digital display).
They'll probably make d*g*t*a* stills cameras for those who don't want to shoot video, then those will be phased out and there will be a minority community mourning the death of 'real' photography.
Where have we seen that before?
It's not photography itself that is the issue - it's the fact that we, as a society, are continually removing all feeling from anything and everything - while at the same time increasingly having less tolerance for that which is not "new."
Very interesting opinions given here. My apologies for almost starting a d...l thread but I ponder about this a lot since I imagine seeing a slight "fed-up-ness" with digital (not only cameras) in western society.
Unfortunately in the past every format debate has still, at it's base, been rooted in still photography (or painting for that matter). The nature of motion-based video is a paradigm shift.
Your average consumer doesn't give a squat and just wants to 300,000 frames of Johnny's first step.
It's not photography itself that is the issue - it's the fact that we, as a society, are continually removing all feeling from anything and everything - while at the same time increasingly having less tolerance for that which is not "new."
You asked for a prophecy so here is mine
(1) Within ~10 years, no more SLRs will be produced.... neither film nor digital. The mirror mechanism will be completely bypassed, in favour of ultrahigh resolution electronic viewfinders (EVFs). The first step towards this - "live view" - is already common to many dslr bodies, and there are already a few quite good bodies that have only EVFs. The resolutions of these screens are decent but actually still quite poor compared to what will soon be possible.
(1b) In terms of body construct, the EVFs will eventually lead to bodies roughly half as thick as they are now, but until foveon-like sensors (with r/g/b stacked at one photosite) are more favourably priced, there will be no incentive to abandon retrofocus designs. The bodies will be thinner than current SLRs but not as thin as a rangefinder.
(2) Also, with the mirror constraints removed, the actual format and orientation will also change dramatically: no more rectangle in landscape orientation! The new format of choice will be square (or even circular!), requiring no body rotation and optimizing the use of the image circle and permitting fine crop adjustments.
The Future? !! Digi-Film TLR !!
I can see a "Twin Lens Reflex" camera that has a digital viewer and capture system at the top and a film capture system at the bottom. One could choose to capture on film or on chip. That way they get the best of both worlds !!
...But probably more importantly, from 'below' where most people are happy with the camera on their 'phone.
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