Yes...well said.Minolta often had the upper hand when it came to developing and using technology but they just as often had terrible timing where the market was concerned and also made some flat-out marketing blunders.
The result was a very, very good system that never got accepted by the press corps. Photographers look at what other photographers are using and all the press corps photogs were using Nikon and (to a lesser degree) Canon so, even though the stores were selling tons of Minolta gear to amateurs, the serious amateurs wanted what the pros were using. Thus Nikon and Canon were "real" cameras and Minolta, Pentax, Olympus and the rest were "consumer" cameras, despite the fact that the quality was, for the most part, comparable. Peoples' perceptions can go a long way. Yes, Nikons are excellent, but most of the cameras coming from Japan at that time were built to very high standards as well. Any of the working pros during that period could have used any of the Japanese camera systems of the day and gotten equal results. They used Nikon because that was the industry standard and they got to be the standard because of excellent designs AND excellent marketing.
It's no different than Bicyclists who need to own the same model of bike that won the Tour De France even though they don't race and the winner could have won on any quality bike.
This should be archived, as the first answer, for All/Future Nikon Vs Canon types of threads.
