Go Back   Rangefinderforum.com > Non Rangefinder Cameras > Digital Fixed Lens Advanced Compacts > Fuji X Series > X100

X100 X100 including operation & reviews!

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes

Old 06-21-2012   #26
Paul T.
Registered User
 
Paul T.'s Avatar
 
Paul T. is offline
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
UK retail for the X100 was £999. Now it's £799, with most available for £670. Two thirds the price of the OM-D without a lens.

I can't quite see your point.... the Fuji X100 is a failure because it sold more than any other prosumer Fuji in years??? Because it got Fuji into hundreds, perhaps thousands, more outlets than was the case before?

Fuji have alwasy done great, quirky cameras like the X Pan or the Natura.... the X100 is perhaps the summation of that aesthetic. No it won't appeal to everyone, but better to be a huge niche camera than a small mainstream camera.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #27
jsrockit
Moderator
 
jsrockit is offline
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: NYC
Age: 39
Posts: 11,722
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aristophanes View Post
The market Fuji needs to sell through the X100 on a continual (halo and glow gone) basis DO compare to "cheap" (who says they are cheap?) DSLRs.

To say that the X100 stands apart and in isolation from the larger market is not how retail camera markets work. DSLR is *always* an option save to those very few who are fanatic about NOT owning a DSLR.
To me the X100 proved that there were people out there who didn't want a DSLR and wanted a rangefinder STYLE camera instead. Of course, it is not everyone and some of those folks most likely did go for a DSLR...just not the low-end level... maybe more like a D7000 as opposed to the D5100.

Quote:
Last I heard from the large chain I do biz with, X100 sales have stalled. It's just another camera on the shelf; the buzz is short-lived these days. It has a certain appeal, but price looks more and more to be an issue when you balance against the trend for all APS-C and larger sensor cameras.
Yeah, I can see that. It's no longer a hype camera, it's just another option these days. However, it is still a unique option.

Quote:
Don't forget, this camera was also positioned as a smaller, lighter, FFL RF-style second camera for those lugging a D3x. It's competing in the second camera segment, where options are growing every quarter.
I would say that was one market segment. Most of the people I know that bought the camera were not using a huge DSLR as well. Admittedly, the number of people I know with the camera is small. The OM-D appears to be the biggest competitor at this point.

Quote:
As with any camera system in the retail market, sales volumes and model age are rectified by price adjustments. I would not be surprised to the X100 get $200 or more cheaper post-PK 2012.

And by 2013 Fuji will need to upgrade the sensor etc.
I can agree with this completely.
__________________
www.flickr.com/jsrockit
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #28
dbarnes
Registered User
 
dbarnes is offline
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Minneapolis, MN
Posts: 245
Fujifilm has said that there will be a another X-pro camera that will be simpler, so presumably also less expensive. It'll be interesting to see how that camera will be positioned relative to the X100.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #29
Aristophanes
Registered User
 
Aristophanes is offline
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 443
Quote:
Originally Posted by Paul T. View Post
UK retail for the X100 was £999. Now it's £799, with most available for £670. Two thirds the price of the OM-D without a lens.

I can't quite see your point.... the Fuji X100 is a failure because it sold more than any other prosumer Fuji in years??? Because it got Fuji into hundreds, perhaps thousands, more outlets than was the case before?

Fuji have alwasy done great, quirky cameras like the X Pan or the Natura.... the X100 is perhaps the summation of that aesthetic. No it won't appeal to everyone, but better to be a huge niche camera than a small mainstream camera.
All I said was it is overpriced, not a failure. It's an $1,199 camera in an APS-C market diving well below $1,000 for sensors and features of this size and quality.

It's value is mostly in the hybrid OVF, retro-ish styling, and relatively compact design. Sensor is very good, but no better than the Sony dominance.

Right now, hype mostly, gone, it's a US$999 camera.

Don't get me wrong; I really like the X100, but in relation to the OP, I am seeing its competitiveness slip. I agree ith the recent Tom Hogan article about the plethora of choices (http://www.sansmirror.com/newsviews/the-collision.html). Right now the X100 looks to be a very expensive alternative. Some will never go to a DSLR and some will never abandon any OVF, but IMO that's a pretty small segment given the value out there and getting better. The X10 to X100 is a huge gap in IQ (sensor size) and features also. So Fuji is crimped in the sub-$1,000 very lucrative market. The X100 appears to have legs there until they revamp it.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #30
Paul T.
Registered User
 
Paul T.'s Avatar
 
Paul T. is offline
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,803
Yup, well, given that UK retail price is now around $999 (retail down from £999 to £799) I can't argue with that, I'm sure the US price will be at that level soon.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #31
sevo
Fokutorendaburando
 
sevo is offline
Join Date: Oct 2008
Location: Frankfurt, Germany
Posts: 3,805
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aristophanes View Post
Don't get me wrong; I really like the X100, but in relation to the OP, I am seeing its competitiveness slip.
Probably. But who, apart from the owners of one, will care? Fuji don't seem to sit on a pile, or the price would have dropped more significantly, and it certainly re-established their reputation prior to the Xpro1 release. Compacts don't differ from other electronic costume jewellery in having a shelf life of barely half a year, and the X100 is no exception. Its age is already over, after a grace period of another half year Fuji will present a successor, in time for the X-mas season.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #32
benlees
Registered User
 
benlees is offline
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Edmonton, AB
Age: 41
Posts: 943
Some people are tilting at windmills in this thread! Of course a digital camera will lose its competitive edge! That is the whole point. Constant upgrades is how its done now and has been since AF and matrix metering came along. We all know this! The X100 is actually (aside from sticky blades) very good value. Gavin put it in very good perspective. And when the next comes out the X100 will still take pictures. Right?
__________________
flickr
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #33
OwenStegemann
Registered User
 
OwenStegemann's Avatar
 
OwenStegemann is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: Oakland, CA.
Posts: 86
In my opinion the x100 is most similar to the luxury point and shoots of the film days, except far more feature laden and dare I say useful. In this category it really only has the Leica x series to compete with (although the x series is a little behind needing an accessory viewfinder). Hopefully fuji acknowledges this an continues the line as this is an important gap to be filled.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #34
Aristophanes
Registered User
 
Aristophanes is offline
Join Date: Sep 2011
Posts: 443
Quote:
Originally Posted by sevo View Post
Probably. But who, apart from the owners of one, will care? Fuji don't seem to sit on a pile, or the price would have dropped more significantly, and it certainly re-established their reputation prior to the Xpro1 release. Compacts don't differ from other electronic costume jewellery in having a shelf life of barely half a year, and the X100 is no exception. Its age is already over, after a grace period of another half year Fuji will present a successor, in time for the X-mas season.
But my nested point was that a fixed lens, X100 successor using an APS-C sensor, targeted at a similar market in, say, 2013, will not be at the same price point as the original X100.

It will be lower because all the APS-C market is going there. Sub-$1,000, even positioned as a "luxury" compact. It's breathing the same air as other APS-C cameras (X-Pro 1 included). I don't think the X100 is a one-off, but you won't see its like again milking a pent-up market at abnormally high premiums again, not until an FF version comes out.

Right now X100 US$1,199 at B&H. I predict an X100 successor will come out at US$999. We may see it previewed or hinted at at PK 2012.

Just trying to answer the OP.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #35
jsrockit
Moderator
 
jsrockit is offline
Join Date: Nov 2009
Location: NYC
Age: 39
Posts: 11,722
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aristophanes View Post
But my nested point was that a fixed lens, X100 successor using an APS-C sensor, targeted at a similar market in, say, 2013, will not be at the same price point as the original X100.
I think that really depends on what the camera ends up being, the materials used, quality / speed of the lens, and if there is any innovation (such as the X100's OVF/EVF combo in 2011) in 2013. Leica charges $2000 for the X2, Voigtlander has made +$1,000 lenses for m4/3, Schnieder is rumored to have $1500-$2000 lenses coming for mirrorless, and bodies are actually going up in prices at times vs. previous models (E-M5, Nex-7, etc). 2013 might be too soon for this prediction. We are only 6 months away from 2013.
__________________
www.flickr.com/jsrockit
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #36
benlees
Registered User
 
benlees is offline
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: Edmonton, AB
Age: 41
Posts: 943
The road map for the X mount includes a 23mm f2 so I wonder what the successor to the x100 will have to offer, if there is one. If there is a successor to the X100 and it has similar features (with the mandatory upgrades of some kind) then I can't see the price falling. I been thinking about getting one and have been to every camera shop in town that sells them. The camera is in stock ("It's the last one!" lol) and have stated they are selling well. None of them will negotiate on the price.
__________________
flickr
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #37
bwcolor
Registered User
 
bwcolor is offline
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: S.F. Bay Area
Posts: 2,172
Image quality has reached a level that I can live with and be happy. My only real wish is for a slow improvement in high ISO and dynamic range. The X100 needs a much better manual focus system from the focusing ring to the means to determine correct focus. A much faster and yet accurate autofocus will be the next market shaking development. I really don't care if the X200 has 16 MPix. Also, in order to keep the X100 small, the lens speed will not be increased.
  Reply With Quote

Old 06-21-2012   #38
gavinlg
Registered User
 
gavinlg's Avatar
 
gavinlg is offline
Join Date: Feb 2007
Location: Melbourne VIC
Posts: 4,394
Quote:
Originally Posted by Aristophanes View Post
All I said was it is overpriced, not a failure. It's an $1,199 camera in an APS-C market diving well below $1,000 for sensors and features of this size and quality.
But it's not overpriced. Maybe to a soccer mom who values video modes and zoom lenses it's overpriced, but to a photographer (to whom the camera was specifically targeted), it's not overpriced at all. The fact that fuji sold many many more than what they expected to sell negates your statement that it needs to be cheaper - it has filled a huge void in the camera market in which it is still the only real competitor. The price doesn't need to drop at all - in fact I would have paid more for mine if I had needed too.

What part of no other cameras can offer the specific features that the x100 offers do you not understand? There is no DSLR anywhere near the size of the x100, ESPECIALLY when you factor in the lens into the equation. Even the diminutive pentax dslr with their DA* pancake lens is many many times bigger, and they DON'T make a 23mm f2 lens - only a 21mm f3.2 that is $650 BY ITSELF, and optically WORSE than the 23mm fujinon.

If the camera was marketed to moms and dads who want a point and shoot to shoot their kids with, it would be overpriced. But the camera is not a point and shoot. My girlfriend struggles to shoot with it. It's a photographers tool - no excuses. You need to know how to use this specific camera to be able to use it. It's less about what is does then HOW it does it - and that separates it from DSLRs and other mirrorless cameras. Not to mention (again) that no one else makes a 35mm f2 equivalent lens for the aps-c mirrorless camera, and all the other aps-c cameras you're comparing it to (in terms of price) don't come with a lens.
  Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off



All times are GMT -8. The time now is 04:19.


vBulletin skin developed by: eXtremepixels
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2013, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.

All content on this site is Copyright Protected and owned by its respective owner. You may link to content on this site but you may not reproduce any of it in whole or part without written consent from its owner.