Actually if the Anti Shake works the way Pentax claims it is a 
breakthrough.  It may not be apparent in any flashy way but it's there.

John Forbes wrote:
> On Wed, 23 May 2007 15:47:24 +0100, Tom C <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>   
>>>> I was simply being kind and was at a loss for words.  If I knew a  
>>>>         
>>> camera
>>>       
>>>> company was going out of business I certainly would not run out and  
>>>>         
>>> buy
>>>       
>>>> more
>>>> of the same because it will eventually stop working, likely not be
>>>> supported, and be worthless.
>>>>
>>>> Tom C.
>>>>         
>>> Let me explain it in short words.  The scenario is that Hoya closes  
>>> Pentax
>>> down.  Like several people here, I have a lot of Pentax lenses, most of
>>> which will last my lifetime, unlike a camera body .  The only thing that
>>> will prevent me from using the lenses is camera failure.
>>>
>>> If I try to sell the lenses, I won't get much for them, because nobody
>>> will want them.  To change to a different system would cost thousands.
>>>
>>> So the sensible thing is to buy a couple more bodies, and by using them
>>> lightly hope to get at least 10 years use out of them, or even more.
>>>
>>> Digital camera technology is now quite mature.  Improvements in picture
>>> quality are pretty small.  Pictures I get from my *ist D are not hugely
>>> worse than my K10D.  I do not expect that any camera produced in the  
>>> next
>>> few years will be so advanced as to make either of these obsolete.
>>>
>>> So if Hoya DOES close Pentax, which I think is highly unlikely, I shall
>>> buy a couple more bodies. Probably a K110D and a K10D. I suspect some
>>> other people in my position will do the same.  Whether body prices will
>>> actually rise, I don't know.  But they won't fall as much as lenses.
>>>
>>> John
>>>
>>>       
>> I understand the logic behind it.  The other view, in this theorhetical
>> situation, is that instead of continuing to drive down a one lane  
>> dead-end
>> street in a car w/o a reverse gear, one could either go down a different
>> street or get a different vehicle.
>>     
>
> If money were no object, one could choose any option.  I am interested in  
> finding the most cost-effective one.
>
>   
>> I guess I think that it's more likely for a body to fail and become
>> worthless than it is for a lens to totally fail.
>>     
>
> Tom, you're nearly there.  It's because bodies are more likely to fail  
> that I would be keen to buy a couple and that way ensure that my lenses  
> could still be used.  I wouldn't buy more lenses because eventually there  
> would be no body to use them on.  That would be a waste.
>
>   
>> Who knows what advancements could be made in digital picture technology  
>> in 5 - 10 years?
>>     
>
> Not much, judging by how little progress there has been in the last two  
> years.  As I said, this is a technology that is now quite mature.  The  
> K10D is remarkable for its feature set and its price.  It doesn't break  
> any new ground technologically.
>
> John
>
>
>   


-- 
All dogs have four legs; my cat has four legs. Therefore, my cat is a dog.


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