I think if Pentax is going to offer IS they will put it into a full-frame SLR, aimed at least in part at 645/67 owners. It will be expensive.

My view is that while many people might like the idea of IS, a much smaller number would actually be prepared to pay for it, so there's little point in putting it into a consumer camera. Those who really want/need it will be delighted to have it in a full frame body.

Meanwhile, I think we might hope for a successor to the *ist D before the summer, with perhaps better support for old lenses, and a much bigger buffer.

John

On Wed, 9 Feb 2005 06:27:30 -0800 (PST), Rick Womer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

It seems to me that Pentax and Minolta have travelled
similar development paths in the past.  For example,
they both put pop-up flashes in high-level cameras,
and both tried power zoom lenses.  So, my guess is
that Pentax will try body-based IS.

--- Martin Trautmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

Hi all,

I like the Pentax *ist D, and I like the *ist Ds
even more.

But the major, missing feature to me still is image
stabilisation.

I've read former staments with interest, e.g. claims
from Herbert Keppler
that IS will be within the body.

Personally, I do expect IS within the body (as
Konica-Minolta does by now).
AFAIK there's no more electrical contact from the
body to the lense that
could provide power for stabilisation. This looks
like an early decision
against IS within the lense.

I guess that IS within the body is more complicated
since the movements have
to go further. I still wonder about the movements
claimed for the
Konica-Minolta sensors (which are far beyond
reasonable understanding). But
it's out of doubt that movements within the lense
can be shorter.

What's your guess? Will we obtain anti-shake within
the next two years?

Will there be any new DSLR within this time at all?

Thanks,
Martin





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