The point is not that innovation is essential or will lead to corporate success, but that it is interesting. Not something one can say of anything Canon has done since the 5DII. Or Nikon since the D800e.
Samsung is a company that, frankly, makes Sony look a little puny in the same way Sony makes Nikon looks small. They have tremendous resources, and a track record of success in many related areas - read displays - a segment they own.
Perhaps the most interesting facet is the raw power of the processor on the NX1. It's staggering.
The big questions are AF, IQ and lens quality. If they nailed the AF the way they say they have....wow. FULL frame coverage and 15fps tracking? A processor that can crunch this data-volume might be able to do that. And a company the size of Samsung might be able to assemble a team to make this happen.
The two new lenses are also impressive on paper. Fully weather sealed - nice! The published MTFs are impressive, and the fact the 16-50 is an f2 to 2.8, and the 50-150 reaches further than traditional the 70-200 range, both tell me they had a mandate to be a little better than the status quo. The 28MPs vs 24MPs say the same thing....let's be a bit better.
Whether they achieve this, and whether is makes a shred of difference to their commercial succes, who knows. But it's definitely interesting.
I have only been blown away by two things in the industry in the last couple of years: the performance of the 645z sensor and the 4K video off the NX1.
While I don't personally shoot or care that much about video, no one can watch the whole 4K demo (especially the animals in the middle part) and not gasp at the beauty and technical wizardry.
If they have translated any of that mojo to the still part, I may have a new carry-around system.
- N.