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Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Printable Version +- Opticallimits (https://forum.opticallimits.com) +-- Forum: Forums (https://forum.opticallimits.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=4) +--- Forum: Micro-Four-Thirds (https://forum.opticallimits.com/forumdisplay.php?fid=16) +--- Thread: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 (/showthread.php?tid=4579) Pages:
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Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Klaus - 11-27-2019 https://learnandsupport.getolympus.com/development-announcements So ... - 12-45mm f/4 PRO - 100-400mm f/5-6.3 IS - 150-400mm f/4.5 1.25x IS PRO - 5 unknowns Not too shabby for a supposedly "dead" brand. I'm slightly wondering about the point with the 12-45mm f/4 PRO. The 12-40mm f/2.8 PRO is quite small and fairly affordable already. RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - thxbb12 - 11-27-2019 yeah that 12-45 seems like a pretty dumb idea. A 12-60 f4 would make much more sense. RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Klaus - 11-28-2019 (11-27-2019, 09:56 PM)thxbb12 Wrote: yeah that 12-45 seems like a pretty dumb idea. A 12-60 f4 would make much more sense. Maybe as a new kit lens for mid grade cameras? Or a PRO pancake - that would be something ... RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Kodachrome 25 - 11-28-2019 (11-28-2019, 12:15 AM)Klaus Wrote:(11-27-2019, 09:56 PM)thxbb12 Wrote: yeah that 12-45 seems like a pretty dumb idea. A 12-60 f4 would make much more sense. The announcement text describes the 12-45 as "ultra-compact". Well, there cannot be enough choice in standard zooms, right? And they already discontinued the 12-50 EZ. Looks like I'll end up with three out of that species: An ultra-compact every-day-lens, which may have the effect, that I actually end up putting the E-M1II into my commute bagback (Thinking of Laurent's 12-32 on the GMsomething). The 2.8 variant for indoor shooting and the 12-100/4 for outdoor family activities... Interesting that all but the 100-400 will get the PRO badge. And an 8-17 with front filter option is definitely a hole in the lineup. As to the "Telephoto Zoom Lens" propositions without detailed specifications except for the vague focal range: I'll guess something like a 60-180/1.8, 50-250/2.8 and a compact 40-150/4. Not sure what bright prime lenses might fit between 17 and 45, but I would certainly fall prey to a compact 14/1.4 RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Mistral75 - 11-29-2019 (11-27-2019, 09:02 PM)Klaus Wrote: https://learnandsupport.getolympus.com/development-announcements The publication of this revised roadmap without any substantial piece of news:
RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - you2 - 12-01-2019 The 150-400 f4.5 seems interesting. I forget what else is available in the super zoom but what i remembered was that the panasonic offering was too slow to have much sharpness. This one seems a bit faster so might perform a bit better (though i suppose that also means it will be heavier). RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - seaial - 04-02-2020 Is there any possibility that Olympus is planning ahead for the new age of computational cameras? Dazzled by what my Pixel 3 can do with tiny lens and sensor, I much look forward to having a camera that can perform similar marvels with a proper lens and larger sensor. Will full frame still ne necessary in the age of even better sensors and in-camera computational processing? In my opinion the future lies in smaller sensors. There are large financial incentives for pushing in that direction. Many uses besides standard cameras, including phones, dash-cams, security cameras etc. RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Klaus - 04-02-2020 They are doing it already - “50MP Handheld High Res Shot” is just that. AI NR and sharpening are just a matter of time. The problem is that the processing time is still too long. You may accept some seconds on a smartphone but not on a camera. Bokeh simulation will come for sure but quality-wise it's not there yet. RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - thxbb12 - 04-02-2020 Computational photography is bound to give better results than what is being captured by a large sensor (without processing). Small sensors will always have much faster readout than larger sensors. When you see what is already achievable today on a 5x5mm sensor, it's quite impressive. Small sensor tech is improving faster than what's available on larger sensors. CPU power, readout speed, and algorithms continue to improve at a very fast pace. You'll be able to chose whatever type of bokeh you like (perfect, imperfect, etc) after the shot was taken. Being able to capture a huge amount of frames allow to increase DR, sharpness, resolution, etc. despite using a tiny sensor. Dedicated MILC will probably still exist, but for very niche stuff only. RE: Olympus lens roadmap 2019 - Klaus - 04-02-2020 Well, let's not get carried away - ultra-wide angle lenses are still just soso on smartphones and long tele shots are pretty much a joke - it'll be tough to overcome a marginal information base with compute unless you truly interpolate the content. Also, the latest gen of smartphone sensors (64mp) is at the theoretical physical limit - and that's when ignoring every aspect of the lens. Not that anyone cares, it seems. |