The rumor circuit gave the M8 extremely high marks and this was the camera that would learn the manufacturers of digital cameras a lesson. The M8 camera has been showered with praise and also with critique.
The true verdict may lay between these two extremes: the camera is not the world beater some had anticipated it to be and it not so bad as some severe critics may assume.
It is a camera that needs a clean look and appraisal that cuts through the dense fog of faithful admiration and the deception that follows when expectations are set unreasonably high.
This series of articles looks at the various aspects of the M8 and tries to evaluate the camera on its measurable qualities and some subjective reflections.
This series has been written over several months of working with the camera. Some changes in view and opinion will be noticed in the course of the reviews.
- M8 part 1: first encounter september 2006
- M8 part 2: image quality and performance
- M8 part 3: field test and monochrome imagery
- M8 part 4: silver (M7) versus silicon (M8)
- M8 part 5: Performance of Leica and Zeiss ZM lenses
- M8 part 6: Comparison Hasselblad H3D 39 Meg
- M8 part 7: results with the IR blocking filter
- M8 part 8: Rangefinder accuracy
- M8 part 9: UV/IR filter effect of 6-bit coding
