Herb,
I don't mean this personally, but in my experience, it's definitely the one who pushes the release that makes the difference, not the equipment although I've been told a few times that my images were pushing the limits of my equipment (with Pentax lacking a tilt/shift lens).

Kenneth Waller

----- Original Message ----- From: "Herb Chong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Subject: Re: Re: How Pentax Could Survive


i spend a lot of time studying my competition, their techniques, and what they deliver. i know just how hard it is to make those shots with my equipment, and i know just how many more shots my shooting acquaintances make with their non-Pentax equipment that cost about the same as mine. i also know what those who have more advanced equipment are delivering. i'm buying some non-Pentax equipment in the next couple of weeks to enable that. not doing so is becoming more and more foolish. for the time being, i'm not selling any Pentax equipment except possibly really low end stuff i barely ever used, just in case the right Pentax body does show up sooner than later. the soonest i can imagine is sometime next summer to actually have one in hand. i can't wait that long.

Herb....
----- Original Message ----- From: "William Robb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Friday, September 23, 2005 10:56 AM
Subject: Re: Re: How Pentax Could Survive


It's amazing how many people can't see that when technology makes something possible, that technology will be used, standards go up, and you either adopt the technology or find another line of work. Using their logic, Danica Patrick would have placed just as well in a 1960s era McLaren.


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