Panasonic announces the new S series and there is no MFT news

After a very long wait the new Panasonic S have now been released. As expected Panasonic didn’t announce anything MFT related today. Jump over to L-rumors to get an extensive coverage.

Preorders:
Panasonic S1R at Amazon, Adorama and BHphoto. In Europe at Calumet, ParkCameras, Jessops.
Panasonic S1 at Amazon, Adorama and BHphoto. In Europe at Calumet, ParkCameras, Jessops.
Panasonic 50mm f/1.4 S at Amazon, Adorama and BHphoto. In Europe at Calumet, ParkCameras, Jessops.
Panasonic 24-105mm f/4.0 S at Amazon, Adorama and BHphoto. In Europe at Calumet, ParkCameras, Jessops.
Panasonic 70-200mm f/4.0 S at Amazon, Adorama and BHphoto. In Europe at Calumet, ParkCameras, Jessops.

First real world Panasonic S1 vs Micro Four Thirds camera size comparison

Thanks to the diligent work from Apotelyt.com we can compare the size of the new Panasonic S cameras with current MFT cameras. But first a reminder: Full Panasonic live blogging will take place tomorrow (Feb 1) at 11:00am London time on L-rumors.com (Click here).

Here is the first comparison with the 10 years old Panasonic G1:

Here is the size comparison with the Panasonic G9:

And now a comparison with the biggest MFT camera we have…the new Olympus E-M1X:

 

Olympus interview at Dpreview: “sensor size isn’t the answer, we won’t use any other mount other than Four Thirds”

Dpreview interviewed Aki Murata from Olympus. Here are some highlights:

Full Frame vs MFT:
We have three strengths: Compactness and light weight, lens quality, and I.S. That combination is unique.
Full-frame is kind of like a buzzword in the market, but lens size cannot be changed. If you compare the systems there are visible differences in terms of size and weight. We do what we believe is right. We don’t make full-frame, because we don’t believe that everyone needs it. For most photographers it’s better to have mobility – if you don’t have a camera with you, you can’t take the shot. We believe that our solution is better for most people. It’s good to have full-frame, but there is a need for a smaller system. This is why Maitani’s R&D philosophy is so important to us.
We believe that the market will be separated into two. One is larger, full-frame, and the other is more portable cameras and lenses. We’re happy that everyone else is going to bigger sensors, and we’re staying where we are. I’m confident, and I’m proud to say that we’re staying here. It doesn’t make sense for us to go full-frame. There is a place for full-frame, and a place for medium format, but our customers can’t [be limited to] three frames per second. There is a customer base that needs the products we offer now, and they need a compact and lightweight system.

E-M1X Reliability:
Ultimate reliability goes far beyond strong build, and resilience to the elements, it also speaks to the cameras performance and consistent operation.

Smartphone versus traditional cameras:
The risk for the photo industry is that people lose interest in traditional photography because their smartphone is so good. If the next step is big lenses and huge cameras, a lot of people might just give up and use their phones instead.
For certain[kind of photography], you cannot utilize a smartphone. You need optics, and capable AF systems. This is the area we want to focus on. We think that there is growth in these areas. This differentiates us a lot compared to smartphones.

Why have only one mount (MFT):
First of all we won’t use any other mount other than Four Thirds. If we had more than one mount, that’s not really user-friendly, and we’re creating the risk that we’d lose customers. If we ask you to buy a camera and lens and then step up to another mount, you might not want to do that. We want to create one, cohesive system with M43. We know our strengths. We have a small and lightweight system, which is good for shooting telezoom lenses, outside. So we’re focusing on this area, to provide suitable products for this field of photography.

Why no top-LCD on the E-M1X:
There are mixed feelings on that. We considered it, but the camera would become bigger and lose operability.

Smaller MFT cameras:
Now that [the E-M1X] has arrived, and it’s our 100th anniversary, you can expect more.

With this interview Olympus made it superclear they will never go Full or Medium Format. And it’s also clear we can expect many new cameras this year!!!

 

Panasonic announcement tomorrow. S1R can take 187 MP high resolution images but on tripod only.

Panasonic launched this teaser video for the S line announcement which will happen tomorrow (Jan 31). On L-rumors.com I posted some new leaked images and specs. And interetsing news is that the S1R camera takes 187 Megapixel images in multi shot mode. But unlike the new Olympus E-M1X this works on tripod only. Probably it’s much harder to make handheld resolution mode work on the larger Full Frame sensor.