I admit it, I still read Thom Hogan's articles pretty regularly, and I also read his first impressions of the Nikon Df piece yesterday. Although I do respect his experience very much, and admire the work he does, I think his judgement has begun to slip and become questionable over the last year or so. I myself used to be in camera and video camera sales for a small chain that had 13 camera stores. I've literally SOLD cameras, face to face, across a sales counter, and I was damned good at it too. I can tell you one thing...if I were still in the biz, the Df would be EASY to sell to qualified customers. Of multiple age demographics, and from multiple levels of experience.
I have not read the counter-article to Hogan's piece, but yesterday, as I read Hogan's list of complaints and fantasy suggestions, I thought to myself...."Wow..he really doesn't 'get it' any longer," and "He loves to second-guess the world's second-biggest camera maker, constantly." Since he has become more involved in the mirrorless camera issue, and has begun his new sansmirror website, his ideas about how a camera ought to be designed,and how it ought to work, seems to have become muddled and confused, mixing and matching d-slr with compact mirrorless buyers and users, and making sweeping, blanket assumptions that really don't seem to apply to all shooters, as well as trying to make weak arguments.
Case in point: he began the article by setting up a THREE-option scenario for how a camera pre-introduction can be perceived by the public. Unfortunately, life is not so simple as to have only "three" types of scenarios.
I like the retro look of the Df, and think it has some unique features. I have not made my mind up about the camera as it might or might not apply to me, since I have not even HELD ONE, but I have to say, I think Hogan's piece is riddled with facile statements. I would have to disagree with a number of his statements in many of his recent "Here's what Nikon screwed up on!' rants, which is what many of his columns have devolved into over the past year. He keeps criticizing almost everything the company does, based on his fantasy of how "he" would run the company and design the products. He basically rips on the camera without having held one. Or shot one. Now I must head off and read ,"What Thom Hogan got wrong, by the guys who actually make their living selling cameras". But as a former top camera salesman, I can tell you one thing...this thing will have MASSIVE appeal to many potential buyers.