It's Canon that has "Anika1980" as an unofficial spokesperson & is the
reason I will never switch to Canon no matter what.

On 1/13/2014 10:51 AM, Christine Nielsen wrote:
Is it Canon?  Or Nikon?  That has Ashton Kutcher doing their promos..?  They 
figured it out.

Well, they would have, anyway, if I could remember what brand it was off the 
top of my head.

But the general idea is the same.

:)
-c

http://christinenielsen.com
http://facebook.com/ChristineNielsenPhotography


On Jan 13, 2014, at 10:41 AM, [email protected] wrote:

You nailed it. Thanks, ann. Heh.

In a  message dated 1/13/2014 7:36:06 A.M. Pacific Standard Time,
[email protected]  writes:
How about "provocatively" clad, Bruce?

Bare legs, high heels,  skin tight top
is definitely in the spirit of "scantily clad"

They are  still pushing the camera with a hot model instead
of someone neatly dressed  in office attire..

Its annoying

ann


On 1/13/2014 08:43,  Bruce Walker wrote:
Thanks for the booth report, Marnie.

I have to wonder about your definition of "scantily clad" though.
Aside  from bare legs, the only way that girl in your shot could be
more  covered would be with a burka.

The very next thing you need to  learn to do on your X-5 is disable the
date/time stamp.  :-)


On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 12:59 AM,   <[email protected]> wrote:
I went to CES in Las Vegas and just  got back.  These were shot with the
X-5
(which I got so I could  take pics for the annual  and PUG).

Thoughts/reactions about CES below. And first impressions of  the  X-5.

I just got the X-5 delivered from Amazon the day  before I left.  I
barely
had time to figure it out. It doesn't  have an Av setting, so I either
shot
manual or program or  green button. None of the shots are great and I
haven't
edited  them.

http://mapphotography.com/CES/index.html

Pentax:  I  asked  two reps if Ricoh intended a FF Pentax. I asked them
separately. The answer was  pretty much, no. One rep said that the
market  share
for FF is a sliver and too  small. The other said because  the 645D is
out
there ( prominently displayed), it  is very  unlikely. He also said that
USA
Pentax reps are the last to know.  They  may know a little in Japan --
but only
when Ricoh/Pentax  actually comes out with  a public release do they find
out. I  went on the trip with a friend, and he  asked later too, and he
was
simply answered, no. Overall, the answer seemed to  be very  much, no.

OTOH, I asked about Ricoh's support of Pentax.  Very  much so -- this
will
be one company that will not drop  Pentax or sell it out.  They are
heavily
invested and very much  behind the "brand name."

The  Pentax display was  understated and tasteful, except for the
scantily
clad   Japanese girl sitting on a chair, pushing a button on a toy train
running on a  track below her. Photo op, supposedly. There were
scantily  clad
girls in a few  places, CES is male-oriented. Evidentially  there were
more
girls in previous  years, but each year brings  more and more women
attendees to
the show. There was  a wall of  K-50's, not quite sure why. The big
poster
shot of the GR was  taken  with the K-3, and that is partly why it was
there,
to  show how large it could be  blown up and not lose  resolution.

Paul's pic had an end spot, and really   was one of the best there. :-)

Okay, about the rest of  CES -- it was not  the primary purpose of my
trip.
I went with  a friend and just wanted a trip,  also saw Las Vegas, a
ghost
town, Red Rock Canyon, and the Bellagio fountain and  some of the
casinos  (I
don't gamble). So I did not ask a lot of questions a lot  of  you would
ask
and did not look at lot of things a lot of you would  look at. I  was
also not
solely interested in photographic  equipment.

I also went  under an assumed identity,  heh, as a audio/visual design
person (smart houses).  This show  is mainly for dealers who are going
to put in
large orders for   products. Nothing is on sale to the public.

So I did  brief tours of two  halls, well, three and a half  halls.

Other Cameras:  The Nikon  display was  similar to Pentax's, a bit
bigger,
lots of yellow. And one  seating  area with a video running about some
camera.
Pentax  had no video seating area.  No scantily-clad girls at  Nikon.

The Canon display was much, much bigger.   The emphasis there was mainly
on
their printers and other imaging  products. They  did have a small
walk-thru
photo gallery. And a  tier of cameras. A shot of that  is in the gallery
above. At  first when I saw it I thought it was photographers  taking
shots  of
the show. Then I realized they were actually cameras to try  out  and
went up
and tried some. That was clever of them and  they were the only ones
that did
that. No poles locking the  cameras down to a hole in a display table.
The
two dancing  girls there were wearing pants and T-shirts. WTG,   Canon.

The Sony display was one of the largest and a bit  confusing. It  had a
'surround' video running above -- it  covered a very large area with
their
products inside, much bigger  than it looks in my picture.

The camera I  was,  personally, most impressed with and taken by was the
Fujifilm (yes,  moving  on) X-M2. Which the rep told me had just started
being
shipped in November. She  only had one, it was so new, although she  had
several X-M1s.

CES:   The  show/convention/conference overall, was overwhelming. It is
HUGE.  Most  people were there to do business and see specific items. If
you
didn't have a  focus it was pretty confusing. Lots and lots  of booths,
but the
most  overwhelming part was simply the  massive number of people walking
around. Almost  worse than  Disneyland during summer. About 150,000 atten
d, so it
was busy,  busy  all the time. Most were wearing black. The
racial/ethnic  mix
was mainly White  and Asian. At least the shuttle buses  between venues
were
good (there is a  three-hall convention  center, two stories, and things
spilled over into three  other  hotels).

I had very interesting discussions with a cable  company  owner and a
representative of GSM (Global Standards  for Mobile) on the shuttle,
one on the
way, and one on the way  back.

PMA:  PMA was also there.  Unfortunately  it was in the last stop, all
travel between buildings was by  foot,  and after a very long walk down
looping a
corridor, back  and forth, linking  buildings, we found it. Since it was
in a
different building and so far away,  it's attendance was low. We spent
time
in the Black Rapid booth, and learned  that PMA will  probably fade away.
Because the big camera companies were in  the  main hall, the PMA was
mainly
support equipment:   bags, tripods, etc.

What were the most interesting  things I saw? I was interested in any
high-tech sci-fiy thing, not  just cameras. And I really took a cursory
look at
most of the things  I saw.

The Black Rapid guy had an add-on lens on  his  iphone. Three little lens
adaptors that rotated, one wide  angle, one fish eye,  and one
telephoto. He
wasn't sure if it  was available for other phones and I  never found the
booth.
But it was intriguing and seemed well  designed.

Drone photography. I took no pics. But they are orderable at  B&H.  The
large one no, the consumer ones, yes. It was   fascinating.

3-D printing. That made me feel the future  is really here.  Large WOW
factor. Heh. Think replicators from  Star Trek. Honestly and truly.
Though right
now they can only  replicate with polymers and not very large items
yet. But
the  technology is there and it will improve and develop. Totally
revolutionary. About five companies were there, all with different
orientations
(many with a research/product prototyping focus). But  two were marketing
consumer 3-D printers and two were marketing 3-D  scanners, as well, one
hand-held. All very impressive and futurist  and oh-my-goddess.

If you  want to know more about  the 3-D printing, just ask. I have some
literature and  was  going to google and research.

Real photos to  come.

The  X-5, meh. It is a Pentax, but... well, I  was warned. I still have
to
play with  it more, but the  viewfinder is only adequate. That's the
best way
I could   describe the whole camera, for a point and shoot it is
adequate and
nothing to  write home about. It does have a green button and it is
cute.
It looks like a  mini-DSLR, so you don't feel stupid  wearing it around.
But
if it wasn't a  Pentax, I really  wouldn't have bothered.

Marnie aka Doe :-)  I  wish  I had more specific impressive insider
camera
stuff to  tell you, but I don't.


--
PDML  Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from  the PDML, please visit the link directly above and
follow the  directions.


--
PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List
[email protected]
http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net
to UNSUBSCRIBE from the PDML, please visit the link directly above and follow 
the directions.

Reply via email to