bebster
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Jul 13, 2003
- Messages
- 527
- Location
- Cape Cod, MA
- Tractor
- JD 4410 eHydro & 430FEL w/ 4N1 bucket & pallet forks
I think we'll start to see a slow-down in the rate of obsolescence. Most of the past obsolesence has been due to resolution increases at affordable prices (under $500 range). You can get a good 3 or 5 megapixel camera now in that price range which has more than enough resolution for most amateur needs, and that resolution is now competitive with tradtional film (which although is more like 20 megapixels, the human eye can't tell the difference when printed on anything but extreme blown-up images).
Buying now won't be as "risky" in the past. What we'll see in the next phase of the digital camera market is prices come down but resolutions won't go up as fast as before, because the difference between 4 and 6 megapixels is not as valuable as between 1 and 3. What you'll risk is saving on the order of another $100 by waiting. If a camera is worth $100 for a year's use, then don't wait to save it and not have the camera to use.
Buying now won't be as "risky" in the past. What we'll see in the next phase of the digital camera market is prices come down but resolutions won't go up as fast as before, because the difference between 4 and 6 megapixels is not as valuable as between 1 and 3. What you'll risk is saving on the order of another $100 by waiting. If a camera is worth $100 for a year's use, then don't wait to save it and not have the camera to use.