It doesn’t feel like a month since my last post and that is because we spent three weeks away, mostly on Grenada and thereabouts.
The “annual shut” of Marston Enterprises gets us away from the freezing Midlands in the UK and we normally go East but this year we went South to where an old friend has a small beach hotel. You can just see our hut in this image. What surprised us is how few people had come to the island. Apparently it is the same everywhere this year. The most expensive hotel on the island appeared to be entirely empty! Grenada is pretty photogenic (away from the readymix concrete plants and the industrial estates, that is). I took a pair of Panasonic micro 4/3rds cameras, the G1 and GF1 with the two “kit” lenses plus Voigtländer 15, 21 and 25 mm VM fit lenses plus an adapter. The 21mm stayed on the GF1 most of the time and took most of the shots, not this one though which is the 14-45 at 17mm. After extensive use it’s evident that both these cameras tend to blow highlights and eventually I dialed in minus 1/3rd EV which did the job in most circumstances. Mrs S refused to be parted from her Canon A570 IS, even with the offer of an Olympus E-P1; she needs an optical viewfinder but doesn’t want a dSLR. This little Canon is a great performer.
And so I missed all the news of new cameras or promised ones being ready to buy. Having used micro 4/3rds cameras on holiday I’m going to stick to a little discourse on these (hereafter known as MFT) or similar entrants which are now I see described by the appropriate label of EVIL for Electronic Viewfinder Interchangeable Lens.
So we have Samsung’s NX10 and Olympus’s E-P2 ready for sale. The Olympus E-PL1 announced and ready for sale at least in the UK, The Panasonic G2 and G10 announced and not available until midsummer. Is it worth buying any of these?
I think I’m going to be brutal about the first two.
When the Samsung NX10 was announced it was expected to support a great many adapters for other lenses and in particular the Leica M mount. To be able to do this with a larger sensor than MFT would have been important. But it won’t work. Everyone except Samsung has said that and from the maths it looks likely that everyone is correct. So we have what looks like a nice little camera with some OK lenses initially and promise of more plus compatibility with Pentax and Nikon lenses in manual focus. To be honest, what makes it better or more desirable than a Canon 1000D that’s a lot cheaper and has a huge number of lenses available for it? There’s lots others better too – Pentax K7 for example. Samsung can keep it relatively cheap and it will find buyers but there’s no way I could say now, as I did before, that MFT builders should worry.
I have an Olympus E-P1. I bought it when it was first available. The design is lovely, it produces clean and desirable jpegs out of the box, it has a cleverly designed live view navigable menu, it also has great things like horizontal and vertical level indicators, in camera vibration control, good stereo movies and it’s a MFT camera. BUT it has no viewfinder, no flash and it’s a pain to use with manual focus lenses. So E-P2 addresses the viewfinder but at a very high cost for as good a viewfinder as it in the Panasonic G1, still no flash and as much of a pain for manual lenses as its predecessor. Sorry Olympus, not something I would buy.
Now we can look at the Panasonic G2 to be ready for sale in June 2010. The G1 is a really good camera but it does not have a video option because that would have clashed with the GH1. So the G2 has the video option that the GF1 has. The G2 has the same articulated screen as the G1, a really useful option. The G2 screen is touch-sensitive like the iPhone etc. Clever? I’m not sure, but there will be people that like it. And then there will be more clever Panasonic stuff – and it is clever. If you want an articulated screen then once the G1 is no longer available then the G2 will be the only MFT option for a bit. If you don’t want the articulated screen then the cut-down G10 could be for you or the better option, the GF1 will likely still be available at a competitive price. From preliminary information the G2 would appear to come with a new and less appealing 14-42mm lens as will the G10.
So to the Olympus E-PL1 just now available for sale in the UK. This does look interesting. It’s a less-well-featured E-P1 in a smaller body. It can take the electronic viewfinder but I doubt that many will pay the price for it. This is a plastic-bodied camera with compact camera style controls and a MFT sensor. Congratulations Olympus. You got it right! It actually has most of the manual control of the E-P predecessors, lacking enough to put it in a lower price bracket. No control wheels but the usual arrangement of buttons to change shooting parameters. No problem for people trading up. It also has a flash! I think this is the first viable option for people with compact cameras to upgrade to an interchangeable lens system. While I don’t think that people will do that in vast numbers, I’m sure that it will be attractive enough to keep the concept running and if I didn’t already have a Panasonic GF1 this Olympus E-PL1 could be a very attractive option.
Posted by marstonfoto 
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