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Shutterbug’s Exclusive photokina Coverage; Formats Aplenty, Printer/Camera Workflows, And A 3D Comeback
The photokina trade fair held in Cologne, Germany, every two years has a solid reputation for previews and announcements meant to shake up the practices and worldviews of photographers, be they amateur or pro. This can come in the form of products real and imagined, with some making it to shelves and others just a wistful dream of designers and engineers who hope what they propose will become the next big thing in imaging. We had a bit of both at the show, with some interesting developments thrown into the mix.
New Formats, Or Not?
In other words, the camera bodies and lenses are said to be smaller and lighter. One way they do this is to eliminate the mirror assembly, making these non-D-SLRs, as there’s no reflex viewing action, but an EVF (Electronic Viewfinder) in the finder. (We are working on our naming convention. Right now there are two possible acronyms: IL-EVF (Interchangeable Lens, Electronic Viewfinder) or IL-DC (Interchangeable Lens, Digital Camera.) I handled the Panasonic Lumix G1 D-SLR at the show and found it pretty much the same size as present small Olympus and Canon D-SLRs, although my expectation that the EVF would be as miserable as they had been in the past was not met. Indeed, the view through the finder and the articulated LCD was very impressive. Live View in the G1 is especially impressive and is to me the “livest” Live View yet. All this, says Panasonic, is thanks to their broadcast camera technology. The Olympus effort seems to be more in the direction of an interchangeable lens rangefinder body type, as opposed to the small D-SLR mode adapted by the G1, which would be quite cool and perhaps bring the old interchangeable lens rangefinder-type cameras back into play, albeit digital style.
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