I fundamentally disagree.
But they do give different results, so I understand why people use them sometimes, and prefer them sometimes.
This isn't worth 4 pages of discussion. Apart from being impractical, it's pointless. I guess it'd be fine for someone who doesn't understand exposure. Even then, it'd be limited benefit.
If you read the thread you’ll see that nearly every poster doesn’t want what you’re proposing.
So why doesn’t it already exist? Very little demand. Probably so little demand that you’re literally the first and maybe only person asking about it.
I didn't post a poll, I asked why. "I don't wanna for my own reasons" isn't really a why answer. And "I don't want it, and my reason is [thing that is objectively not true, like "OVFs preview the image better"]" is not very compelling either.
And when I go just ask AI summaries or wikipedia or some dpreview summary or anything or mirrorless vs DSLRs, without leading or biasing questions, EVFs are overwhelmingly the number one reason focused on for why the shift
Same question to you as others saying something similar: If previews of exposure, color, histograms, etc. are of little to no value, why did EVFs and mirrorless utterly sweep the industry 100%?
Because all of those things are positive feedback loops - self congratulatory circular reasoning.
People just like to buy crap, and then have that impulse buy rationalised by someone or anything.
Easier to make? Fewer moving parts? Focusing with an EVF is terrible - it's fine with an autofocus lens but total crap with a genuine manual focus lens and no focus assist.
Seriously. Mirrorless cameras are simpler and cheaper to make than DSLRs. Just think about it - it's obvious.
Obviously I'm referring to % market share. Among people who wanted to buy a cameras, as a group they clearly considered mirrorless way better than DSLRsAnd none of those are "sweeping the industry" currently.
Great, so it wouldn't even matter if this was a good product or not by this logic, "people just like to buy crap" and will buy it whether it is or isn't... right? Or do you actually think people prefer good products, not any random object?
Because all of those things are positive feedback loops - self congratulatory circular reasoning.
People just like to buy crap, and then have that impulse buy rationalised by someone or anything.
About 3 million wanted to buy Mirrorless when Sony first coined the term as a means of distanguishin their product from the dSLR and popularizing the weight and bulk reduction (and even though Olympur and Panasonic had products that could be called 'mirrorless' 3-4 years sooner). About 5 Million want to buy them today. Hardly 'taking the industry storm' judging by AAGR, more like 'surviving better than dSLR'.
Many choose not to buy mirrorless because the expense vs. 'perceived benefit' equation does not make sense for them. Quite unlike the demand curve seen in the change from film to dSLR. The perceived benefit of the digital finder suits only a declining number of interchangeable-finder SLRs, which are now mostly owned by those seeking to shoot film with quite affordable old film SLRs that are cheaper to buy than any digital finder retrofit would cost. I cast no aspersion on the product concept, I merely assess the opportunity for its limited viability except to a very small niche...a smaller niche than the digital finder retrofit offered by ImBack.
But what do I know...I only spent a lifetime professionally assessing product marketability and doing everything I could to guide products to broaden their market appeal to maximize their financial success for companies.
Did you assess something cool like Porsche or Ronco Pocket Fisherman?
Why do people want stainless steel kitchen appliances, ugly!
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