Tom Caldwell
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 13, 2007
- Messages
- 905
Not much interest in "new gear" (for some unusual reason) and I also think that we are tired of acting as a design bureau for a camera that is unlikely ever to be made. But sometimes a bit of ranting and dreaming helps to pass the time... for those that are not otherwise busy of course.
A few weeks ago a Chinese site mentioned a new Ricoh patent which used the movement of the sensor based image stabiliser to take readings at points of oscillation and use the data to enact a form of phase detect auto focus. Bear in mind that as far back as a couple of years ago Rioch also re-patented the existing Pentax sensor based image stabilisation in what was very obviously a GXR module, but have not used it. Since then a Pentax dslr has been released with the image stabilisation also being usd as an anti-moire device.
We cannot add two and two together here and make fourteen as patents are often taken out as a defensive system and a source of future royalites (and possible suits for infringements). Some are merely good ideas and are simply left on the table for possible use at an undetermined future date.
The Chinese article had a GR series body as illustration, but maybe that was simply to illustrate that the Ricoh company did in fact make a camera. The technical diagram surrounding the patent looked more like a small sensor camera, not quite the Q, but there is no need to show that precise camera design(s) that the patent is likely, if ever, to be used in.
Hot on the heels of this article is the announcement of the Q-S1 but the little that is known about this camera offers no clue as to whether it contains a revolutionary phase-detect on an oscillating sensor. I think not as if so I would have thought there would be more drums banging and cymbals clashing.
So, might the new sensor phase detect be a Q-model further away still? Or something for the Pentax dslr line that might not really need it. Probably not for the GXR mount module - if ever there is another one. Image stabilising legacy MF lenses would be very useful but MF lenses are undountedly "MF". It could be used as a "third mode" for confirming focus or perhaps even as someone suggested the sensor itself might be moved to focus a MF lens?
In any case the boys down in the Ricoh R&D labs are obviously not going to sleep even if they are not designing cameras for production. One might even wonder if they are just accumulating some "killer" new ideas and might surprise us one day (but don't pine away in expectation).
Meanwhile enjoy what we have, buy whatever else takes your fancy, but don't write Ricoh off as they might just come back with a vengeance one day.
Tom
A few weeks ago a Chinese site mentioned a new Ricoh patent which used the movement of the sensor based image stabiliser to take readings at points of oscillation and use the data to enact a form of phase detect auto focus. Bear in mind that as far back as a couple of years ago Rioch also re-patented the existing Pentax sensor based image stabilisation in what was very obviously a GXR module, but have not used it. Since then a Pentax dslr has been released with the image stabilisation also being usd as an anti-moire device.
We cannot add two and two together here and make fourteen as patents are often taken out as a defensive system and a source of future royalites (and possible suits for infringements). Some are merely good ideas and are simply left on the table for possible use at an undetermined future date.
The Chinese article had a GR series body as illustration, but maybe that was simply to illustrate that the Ricoh company did in fact make a camera. The technical diagram surrounding the patent looked more like a small sensor camera, not quite the Q, but there is no need to show that precise camera design(s) that the patent is likely, if ever, to be used in.
Hot on the heels of this article is the announcement of the Q-S1 but the little that is known about this camera offers no clue as to whether it contains a revolutionary phase-detect on an oscillating sensor. I think not as if so I would have thought there would be more drums banging and cymbals clashing.
So, might the new sensor phase detect be a Q-model further away still? Or something for the Pentax dslr line that might not really need it. Probably not for the GXR mount module - if ever there is another one. Image stabilising legacy MF lenses would be very useful but MF lenses are undountedly "MF". It could be used as a "third mode" for confirming focus or perhaps even as someone suggested the sensor itself might be moved to focus a MF lens?
In any case the boys down in the Ricoh R&D labs are obviously not going to sleep even if they are not designing cameras for production. One might even wonder if they are just accumulating some "killer" new ideas and might surprise us one day (but don't pine away in expectation).
Meanwhile enjoy what we have, buy whatever else takes your fancy, but don't write Ricoh off as they might just come back with a vengeance one day.
Tom