Oct 16
i bit the bullet…
Posted by admin in equipment on 10 16th, 2008| icon3No Comments »

and bought a k20d yesterday! It should be here by the end of next week, just in time for end of the beautiful fall color show here!
I’ll be sure to post up a full write-up when it arrives, including sample shots.

Sep 22

***UPDATED***

it’s now official: pentax press release for the k2000!!!!

i’m super stoked on this body, while people can argue the pros and cons of the pentamirror (which the km has) versus the pentaprism (which the k10d has) the overall specifications of this new and much anticipated body are epic. check out the details over HERE at dpreview.com which includes a great chart showing the k10d next to the new km, plus an awesome hands-on preview. they also highlight pentax’s new (yet to be officially announced?) lightweight lenses as seen here:

and for comparison’s sake, next to the old 18-55mm kit lens

Jun 26

check out dpreview’s REVIEW OF THE THE K20D

here is their conclusion:

The Pentax K20D could be seen as a K10D Mk2, a camera that attempts to move on while putting right the minor flaws in its predecessor. And in that respect, it’s a huge success. The K20D builds on the strengths of its forebear and corrects for the issue that plagued us most. It offers a great on-paper specification that is backed-up by a level of customization that allow you to tailor the camera to the way you want to shoot.

There are a couple of black marks against it, which should direct photographers with specific needs away to look at more specialized models. The live view mode is neither as seamless as Sony’s implementation nor as useful for tripod-based work as Olympus’s and consequently feels like a feature that has been added purely to make the camera more marketable. But, before deciding whether this puts you off, it’s worth thinking hard about what you’d use it for. Likewise, the continuous shooting rate looks pedestrian by contemporary standards, so sports shooters should look elsewhere.

The autofocus, while never breathtakingly fast, is also never intrusively slow for general shooting. Using enthusiast-level lenses (16-45mm f/4 or 35mm f/2.8 Macro), its performance, even in low light, has been at least comparable with similarly-priced cameras, if not quite up to the standards of the more expensive, similarly-specified cameras from other brands.

The Samsung co-developed sensor may well prove to be a turning point for Pentax, giving the company a little more control over sensors it uses and, in general terms, it delivers high resolution images with noise levels that are comparable with its competitors (and presented with a commendably hands-off approach to noise reduction that allows the user to decide how they wish to deal with noise, rather than smearing it all away). However, the hot pixel problems, combined with the sample-to-sample variability (in this instance ISO 3200 banding), represent the sorts of problems we haven’t seen in DSLRs launched in the past few years. Which makes us wonder whether Samsung has over-reached itself with such an ambitious design. This is reflected in our image quality score that without these niggles would have been even higher.

In short, the K20D is a great stab at making a photographers’ camera - a camera for people who love taking images, are happy to invest in lenses (perhaps the primes that can make the most of those 14.6 million pixels), but aren’t going to be recouping the cost of their equipment through regularly selling images. It offers a very pleasant, near pro-level, photographic experience at a reasonable cost and in a body that feels solid, well built and as if it was designed by someone who used one themselves.

Because the K20D offers so much that the enthusiast photographer would enjoy, it would be churlish to let the sensor-based flaws, which have little impact in real-world shooting, prevent us giving the camera our highest award. This isn’t to say it’s a faultless camera or one that’s suited to everybody but one with only minor drawbacks that should only dissuade a small number of potential buyers.

great job guys!

Apr 21

not bad for a pretty well-rated lens with decent range!

CLICK HERE

and HERE is a few reviews at the pentax lens review database at the PENTAX FORUMS

*itchy BUY finger*

Apr 15

if you’ve been wondering what the differences really are between pentax’s k10d and it’s samsung counterpart, the gx-10 HERE is an awesome side-by-side comparison of the two. while the guts and even the lens mount is the same, it appears as though the k10d is of better quality with a more aesthetically pleasing interface. don’t let that stop you from snagging a gx-10 though, they’re commonly MUCH cheaper than the k10d, just don’t hold your breath as b&h has already discontinued carrying BOTH of them.