Canon Digital Rebel (Announced Aug 03, 3 months before the *istD shipped 
in october 03), Fuji S2 Pro (Wasn't replaced by the S3 Pro until mid 
2004). The D70 arrived shortly after  the *istD (Jan 04).

The *istD was comparable to the D100 and 10D in specifications and 
performance (Actually the 10D was a bit better than the other two due to 
a higher framerate and larger buffer), which were current models when it 
was introduced. All 3 were mid-range bodies getting sold as semi-pro 
bodies (Which none of them were).

-Adam



J. C. O'Connell wrote:
> Name one DSLR on the market that was LOWER
> Specificed and not discontiuned when *istD
> Came out. Pentax
> Started cheap and at the bottom and worked 
> Their way DOWN ( until the K100D and K10D).
> jco 
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
> Adam Maas
> Sent: Saturday, October 21, 2006 3:20 PM
> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
> Subject: Re: The JCO survey
> 
> Nope.
> 
> It was almost identical to the Nikon D100, and the Canon EOS 10D offered
> 
> only a larger buffer over the D100 and *istD. The Canon D60 and D30 were
> 
> lower-end models, as was the Nikon D70 that shortly followed the *istD's
> 
> introduction. And at the time it was the best-specified camera in 
> production at Pentax (The MZ-S, which is the only recent body to be 
> better-specified than the *istD, ended production at approximately the 
> same time). The Canon Digital Rebel was introduced about that time as 
> well, and was far less camera than the *istD (In fact the original rebel
> 
> is arguably the lowest-end DSLR ever made, only the earlier Fuji S1 Pro 
> can give it a run (the Fuji is less capable, but far earlier technology)
> 
> -Adam
> 
> 
> J. C. O'Connell wrote:
>> The *istD WAS a bottom line model compared to 
>> All other makes and models of DSLRS on the market
>> At the time. Just because they later made even
>> Lower specified models doesn't make it "better"
>> The bottom just got lower which was weird.
>> jco
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf
> Of
>> Shel Belinkoff
>> Sent: Saturday, October 21, 2006 11:54 AM
>> To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List
>> Subject: RE: The JCO survey
>>
>> You haven't a clue.  The istD was _not_ a bottom of the line model,
> nor
>> did
>> it seem that Pentax was trying to put out "the cheapest possible model
>> they
>> could ..."  After the D came the DS, which was substantially less
>> expensive
>> even though it had some benefits and features the D didn't have.  The
> DS
>> was quickly followed by the DL, which was even less expensive, had
> fewer
>> features than the DS.  The DS and DL were great successes for Pentax.
> 
>> Shel
>>
>>
>>
>>> [Original Message]
>>> From: J. C. O'Connell 
>>> This is the third time I have posted my thery on this.
>>> I think that Pentax's first DSLR (*istD) was trying
>>> To be the cheapest possible model they could hit the
>>> DSLR scene with. In that case, it's a BOTTOM OF THE LINE
>>> Model 
>>
>>
> 
> 


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