> > [snip] I fear that Olympus walked itself > into a tar pit with the 4/3 sensor size, and may find - have found - > that they cannot produce a 4/3 sensor with the currently acceptable > mgp count which has currently acceptable noise levels. And if they > can't do that, it doesn't matter what primes they produce.
It's an interesting situation that Olympus is in with the DSLR line, for sure. Personally, I think the photos from my E-300 (with 14-54, or 30 f1.4 (sigma), or 50 f2) look better than the ones I got with my Canon (with L-series zooms and prime macro of similar focal lengths). Noise is not a big problem for me - I recognize that it is for some, those who need high ISO settings. The bigger problems - the primary problems - are the Canon / Nikon marketing machines! It's hard to imagine how Olympus wil ever compete with Canon or Nikon as a pro line - they had trouble years ago with the OM's and the market is even more concentrated now. I just hope there are seme people who do not care to have the same sterilized technical Canon-polished look to their images that everyone else has. People who will buy Olympus Digital for what it is. Thre have to be enough of these people to sustain the line, or it will become a much more consumer-focused line. I'm amazed at the quality of lenses that Olympus has gambled on producing, given the difficulty of getting pros to use a non-Canon / non-Nikon system, no matter how good.
Regarding zooms and primes, by the way... I just wanted to mention that they do make a difference. I like putting a prime on simply as a way to influence my photographic state of mind. Put a fast prime on and go for a walk, looking for interesting photographic content. With a Zoom you will see things a little differently, cause you just twist the ring and everything changes, instead of having to walk across the street, or hop the fence, or talk to somebody.
Finally, to get back on the topic of this thread, I'd say the E-1 is a great handling camera but it is not capable of making any better pictures than an E-300 (or, I presume, an E-330 or E-500). With the grip it handles exceedingly well, and runs all day too, but the 5MP images do not allow for much if any cropping, and the focus seems less reliable compared to the E-300.
Cheers! - marc
It's an interesting situation that Olympus is in with the DSLR line, for sure. Personally, I think the photos from my E-300 (with 14-54, or 30 f1.4 (sigma), or 50 f2) look better than the ones I got with my Canon (with L-series zooms and prime macro of similar focal lengths). Noise is not a big problem for me - I recognize that it is for some, those who need high ISO settings. The bigger problems - the primary problems - are the Canon / Nikon marketing machines! It's hard to imagine how Olympus wil ever compete with Canon or Nikon as a pro line - they had trouble years ago with the OM's and the market is even more concentrated now. I just hope there are seme people who do not care to have the same sterilized technical Canon-polished look to their images that everyone else has. People who will buy Olympus Digital for what it is. Thre have to be enough of these people to sustain the line, or it will become a much more consumer-focused line. I'm amazed at the quality of lenses that Olympus has gambled on producing, given the difficulty of getting pros to use a non-Canon / non-Nikon system, no matter how good.
Regarding zooms and primes, by the way... I just wanted to mention that they do make a difference. I like putting a prime on simply as a way to influence my photographic state of mind. Put a fast prime on and go for a walk, looking for interesting photographic content. With a Zoom you will see things a little differently, cause you just twist the ring and everything changes, instead of having to walk across the street, or hop the fence, or talk to somebody.
Finally, to get back on the topic of this thread, I'd say the E-1 is a great handling camera but it is not capable of making any better pictures than an E-300 (or, I presume, an E-330 or E-500). With the grip it handles exceedingly well, and runs all day too, but the 5MP images do not allow for much if any cropping, and the focus seems less reliable compared to the E-300.
Cheers! - marc