Whenever a new technology is introduced, there is an explosion of interest 
followed by improvements at a rapid pace followed by a plateau where things 
sort of stay the same, followed by survival of the fittest as the best things 
survive and the others disappear.

This all reminds me of personal computer and software in about 1985-6. At one 
point, there were about 30 kinds of word processors all trying to make it to 
the top, some based on power, some based on user friendliness. One PC magazine 
had an issue devoted to a view of each (remember Einstein Writer, Perfect 
Writer, XyWrite II, Nota Bene, Volkswriter, WordStar, PFS Write, DisplayWrite, 
Leading Edge WP?). Over the next few years, all but WordPerfect and MS Word 
were pretty well weeded out, with a few other specialized word processors still 
alive. In digital, Canon and Nikon seem to have the pro market covered, and 
aren't too threatened by others. The sensor size of fourthirds and 
microfourthirds seems to keep them from threatening the Canon and Nikon pro 
SLRs, but compact cameras are where all of the excitement seems to be.

Pentax, for me, is squarely between the big flagship Canon and Nikon dSLRs 
(which feel like carrying a medium format camera to me) and the m4/3 cameras 
(which are more like a Rollei35). Carrying the Pentax K-x with a 43/1.9 is more 
comfortable and weighs less than a Leica M. The K-7 with a 31mm lens is 
heavier, but doesn't approach the big dSLRs in bulk.

Just my $02.

Jeffery
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