No way, I bet they are still a small fraction of total camera
Sales. The mainstream is still very heavily digital p&s.
jco

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Adam Maas
Sent: Friday, October 13, 2006 9:48 PM
To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
Subject: Re: The JCO survey

You do realize that we are currently in the biggest boom of SLR sales 
since the late 70's, right?

SLR's are back.

-Adam


J. C. O'Connell wrote:
> You cannot prove this and I cannot prove otherwise
> But I would bet the demographics of SLR users is
> Much older than P&S shooters because P&S has been
> Mainstream for the past 20 Years while SLRS faded
> Out at that time. 
> jco
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
Of
> Adam Maas
> Sent: Friday, October 13, 2006 8:58 PM
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: Re: The JCO survey
> 
> ROFLMFAO.
> 
> The college photography market is buying cheap DSLR's like candy. The 
> old fogey's are buying Hassy's because they can now afford one.
> 
> I shoot regularly with the local flickr members. They're
overwhelmingly 
> young Canon shooters, with a helping of Nikon and Pentax shooters (And

> one lone Minolta guy) and damn near all digital. Most of the few film 
> shooters started with digital and tried film after seeing one of the 
> older types still shooting it. There is a smattering of older shooters

> in the group, but at 29 I'm older than 75% of that crowd.
> 
> -Adam
> 
> 
> J. C. O'Connell wrote:
>> The kiddie (college) market is Digital P&S because they
>> Grew up on P&S. It's the old fogies who shoot
>> SLR because only they even know a SLR is in the
>> First place.
>> jco
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> Of
>> mike wilson
>> Sent: Friday, October 13, 2006 5:51 PM
>> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>> Subject: Re: The JCO survey
>>
>> Mark Roberts wrote:
>>
>>> William Robb wrote:
>>>
>>>> Where is the economic advantage to them to put a feature on a
camera
>> of 
>>>> little benefit to a very small % of the user base?
>>>> One user being willing to buy a feature doesn't make a very
rational
> 
>>>> argument for inclding something, does it?
>>>> There is a much larger % of users who wouldn't use it, don't want
to
> 
>>> pay 
>>>
>>>> for it, and may look elsewhere for a camera (read different brand) 
>>> And in fact these are the people who represent the most desirable 
>>> demographic for Pentax: The college-age crowd just getting into 
>>> photography - who may become life-long Pentax users if that's the 
>>> system they can be persuaded to buy into today. Despite the elitism
> we
>>> older, more experienced photographers feel, we aren't a very
>> profitable 
>>> long-term investment to pursue.
>> With the greatest respect 8-) that's cobblers.  Middle-aged and older

>> people are where the money is at.  No kids (if they've got any 
>> sense....), house paid for, at the peak of their earning potential. 
>> They are the ones with money to throw at expensive hobbies and
> pastimes.
>>> The people who Pentax most needs to attract weren't even *born* in
>> 1982 
>>> when the "A" series lenses were introduced! (Isn't that a scary
>> thought 
>>> for a lot of us!)
>>>
>>>
>>
> 
> 


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