Author Topic: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?  (Read 14527 times)

bjornthun

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #30 on: November 05, 2016, 02:51:13 »
Higher prices and declining sales for the near future.
This applies to the entire camera industry.  :(

Tristin

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #31 on: November 05, 2016, 03:01:02 »
Your comparison about groceries is at best ludicrous.

Btw. Sony supports MF glass, including Nikon Ai-S... They even support third party AF E mount lenses as well as third party MF glass with full electronic integration, from Cosina/Voigtländer and from Zeiss. Proprietary? No more than others. I find MF a lot easier with Sony A7 than with a DSLR, so in my case your statements about Ai-S support is dead wrong.

Aestetics? Nothing AF/digital is aestetical except maybe Fujifilm cameras.

My perspective on Sony and their products is from my handful of years as an electronics salesmen.  They always had the most proprietary stuff, always had the hardest UIs for customers to learn and were far far more likely to end up suddenly discontinued and totally unsupported.  They did often have great insides, but the rest . . . not so much.

On the legacy glass issue, they are a newcomer to the market and aggressively trying to secure a healthy chunk of the market.  I have no doubt things would change once they feel secure and unthreatened.  Allowing people to use their old glass is good for bringing them into the fold, but not good when you want to sell new stuff and no longer need to worry about securing your place in the market.  This is where Sony being a peddler of anything electronic comes into play.  They would have no qualms killing legacy support overnight as soon as it suited them.  Legacy support suits them today and will not suit them tomorrow.  Of all the things in this response, you can take that one to the bank.

Aesthetics is a personal opinion.  Sony products have always looked to me like someone from the past tried really hard to make something look futuristic.  Not my thing. 

As for the grocery comparison, I mean that I would much rather patron companies that have a specific focus they work with.  I simply do not like companies that do anything and everything, based on a personal preference for market variety and company passion.  Walmart sells bananas just like my local grocer, but Walmart also sells a billion other things and relly doesn't give a shit about bananas like my local grocer does.  I am well aware most people don't care about this, I do.

Lastly, ludicrous is quite strong word on it's own to stamp on someone's perspective.  And apparently I scored even lower than that with you.  Feel free to ignore my words if they are that below you.

P.S.  Disliked Sony before they got into ILCs and have not owned a single Sony product since my days as an electronics salesmen.  My view on Sony is totally independent from their push into this market.
-Tristin

bjornthun

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #32 on: November 05, 2016, 05:04:14 »
My perspective on Sony and their products is from my handful of years as an electronics salesmen.  They always had the most proprietary stuff, always had the hardest UIs for customers to learn and were far far more likely to end up suddenly discontinued and totally unsupported.  They did often have great insides, but the rest . . . not so much.

On the legacy glass issue, they are a newcomer to the market and aggressively trying to secure a healthy chunk of the market.  I have no doubt things would change once they feel secure and unthreatened.  Allowing people to use their old glass is good for bringing them into the fold, but not good when you want to sell new stuff and no longer need to worry about securing your place in the market.  This is where Sony being a peddler of anything electronic comes into play.  They would have no qualms killing legacy support overnight as soon as it suited them.  Legacy support suits them today and will not suit them tomorrow.  Of all the things in this response, you can take that one to the bank.

Aesthetics is a personal opinion.  Sony products have always looked to me like someone from the past tried really hard to make something look futuristic.  Not my thing. 

As for the grocery comparison, I mean that I would much rather patron companies that have a specific focus they work with.  I simply do not like companies that do anything and everything, based on a personal preference for market variety and company passion.  Walmart sells bananas just like my local grocer, but Walmart also sells a billion other things and relly doesn't give a shit about bananas like my local grocer does.  I am well aware most people don't care about this, I do.

Lastly, ludicrous is quite strong word on it's own to stamp on someone's perspective.  And apparently I scored even lower than that with you.  Feel free to ignore my words if they are that below you.

P.S.  Disliked Sony before they got into ILCs and have not owned a single Sony product since my days as an electronics salesmen.  My view on Sony is totally independent from their push into this market.

Then we have very different views on Sony. I have used Sony products for three decades, and have usually preferred Sony UIs to just about everything else in consumers electronics. I'm the kind of person whose VCR didn't blink "00:00". ;)

Examples of Nikon dropping support abruptly: Nikon scanner drivers, Nikon CNX 2.
Will there be more Nikon 1 lenses or cameras?

Nikon and Sony appear very similar to me, just like all companies run for profit. The best way to keep them on their toes is for them to have real competition. That precludes a merger or acquisition between Nikon and Sony. Then we're back on topic.

tommiejeep

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #33 on: November 05, 2016, 06:25:57 »
I do not think the dropping of CNX2 compares at all with Sony and the Walkman.   It all comes down to deep pockets.   Nikon has never had deep pockets at the best of times  :(
I totally agree with competition, good for all of us.
Looks as if Google is killing off Nik to sell more Apps.  Of course, then there is Michael Dell ....  :)
Tom
Tom Hardin, Goa, India

Les Olson

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #34 on: November 05, 2016, 09:57:33 »
So what will pull Nikon from the woods? :-\

The woods everyone is in are simply the fact that in the 10 years or so after the arrival of digital no one had a camera, so everyone bought a new one.  Even people who were not actually interested in photography had to buy a Nikon/Canon camera to take digital pictures, and many ended up with an ILC.  Then, because the technology moved very quickly in its early phase, those cameras were soon obsolete and were replaced.  All the camera companies expanded dramatically to meet that dramatically expanded demand. 

Now the market is returning to something like it's state before digital: people who are not interested in photography use their phones, so Nikon/Canon are mainly selling to a much smaller market: people actually interested in photography.  Nikon managed perfectly well selling film cameras to that market, so there is no reason it cannot manage perfectly well now.  Managing the de-expansion will be tricky, but there is no fundamental reason it cannot be done. 

There is a problem with the de-expansion of the digital market that was not there with film: meeting R&D costs.  That is why consolidation might happen, because bigger companies can sustain R&D costs in a way smaller companies cannot.  The other way R&D costs can be met is by sharing them with related product lines.  Olympus has said it will keep making cameras, despite the fact that it is losing money on the camera business, because of synergies with the much bigger and more lucrative medical market (Olympus is the world leader in endoscopes, and it turns out that one of the first things people in India and China do when they become well-to-do is to not to buy a camera, but to get someone to poke a lighted tube up their behind, so that market is expanding very rapidly).  Photographic cameras are a small part of the digital sensor market: surveillance and remote control cameras are the biggest part and getting rapidly bigger.  It is not a camera company Sony would be buying, it is a garage door-opening company. 

And Thom Hogan has said today that the photographer who started the rumour has told him that what he meant was not that Sony might buy Nikon, but that Sony expected to take market share from Nikon as they struggled. 

Fanie

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #35 on: November 05, 2016, 11:12:19 »
It's a fact that the only hardware that easily makes 10 years in my household and still functions as on day one is my Nikon cameras and Yamaha sound system.

The rest of the stuff goes into recycling before five years are up, mostly past their sell date or broken.

For that reason alone I will not touch a Sony. Their after sales support in South Africa is non existing.
Fanie du Plessis
Pretoria,  South Africa

Peter

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #36 on: November 06, 2016, 18:54:11 »
I guess we will have to sit and wait?

I own a few Sony electronics mainly ES series stereo components CD transports and Cassette decks over 10+ years old and still kicking.
I have a 32" Sony Bravia flat screen over 10 years old and still looks good.
But most of this stuff winds up in the recycle bin or the land fill within four years these days.

pluton

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #37 on: November 06, 2016, 20:15:34 »
Sony's record with small consumer electronics in the post-cassette era has been pretty bad.  Their professional broadcast equipment has been excellent quality, however.  Two extremes.
The design/handling of the A7 cameras seem to me like consumer designs.   Sharp corners and slick surfaces on a device meant to grasped and operated by the human hand.  ??
I think Nikon or Canon, if they treated it as a professional product, could make a mirrorless competitor much nicer than the current Sony 24x36 cams.

Keith B., Santa Monica, CA, USA

MILLIREHM

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #38 on: November 06, 2016, 21:15:23 »
The woods everyone is in are simply the fact that in the 10 years or so after the arrival of digital no one had a camera, so everyone bought a new one.  Even people who were not actually interested in photography had to buy a Nikon/Canon camera to take digital pictures, and many ended up with an ILC.  Then, because the technology moved very quickly in its early phase, those cameras were soon obsolete and were replaced.  All the camera companies expanded dramatically to meet that dramatically expanded demand. 

Now the market is returning to something like it's state before digital: people who are not interested in photography use their phones, so Nikon/Canon are mainly selling to a much smaller market: people actually interested in photography.  Nikon managed perfectly well selling film cameras to that market, so there is no reason it cannot manage perfectly well now.  Managing the de-expansion will be tricky, but there is no fundamental reason it cannot be done. 


lots of truth in there, the learning curve is not as strong as it was in the last decade, the market is somewhat saturated

When i started with photography some 30 years ago the consumer market seen Canon and Minolta as the main competitors. Nikon was #3 (at the best) and focussed more on Pro-sector (Canon was not that present in this field then). But its easier to manage a astatus quo than to do a controlled downsizing.

Nikon probably should re diversify again (i remember some years ago it had is income mainly as a stepper company  and not for photographic products)

Probably difficult to gain more importance in the video sector, but Nikon should soon provide an atttractive and competitive series of mirrorless camera systems (includign a Full format sensor) that is able to use the F- mount SLR lenses with an highly compatible adapter plus a new series of compact lenses doing better than those of the Nikon 1 Series
Wolfgang Rehm

ArendV

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #39 on: November 06, 2016, 22:03:29 »
I am actually quite happy with the performance of the Nikon 1 lenses and think especially the 18.5, 6.7-13 and 30-110 offer very good quality for their price in a compact package.
Nikon did a lot of things wrong when they launched Nikon 1 (foremost price), but for me it now serves well as a compact system for light travelling. And the Nikon 1 system shows Nikon has the technology inhouse to also develop mirrorless camera's with larger sensors with fast on sensor PDAF and high framerates if necesary.
They do not need Sony for that.
Arend

MILLIREHM

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #40 on: November 06, 2016, 22:36:03 »
Regarding Nikon I system i mostly disliked the finish of the lenses. And in all those years Nikon did not manage to provide a lens with macro capability for the system.
I bought (very unusual) a Nikon 1V1 as an early adopter (overprized of course9 and this camera clearly showed the discrepancy between what could have been done and what Nikon actually achieved. Sometimes good if you need a crop camera or absolute silent mode.
For general purposes i found that my Coolpix had a better usability. Nikon 1 could not establish a place between SLR and Coolpix

I can live without a new mirrorless system but it would be wise for Nikon to get its feet on the ground in this field
Wolfgang Rehm

Frank Fremerey

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #41 on: November 08, 2016, 10:47:32 »
Reading through the answers I still feel there is a lot to win
Sony Service is bad. My local store say: "three weeks minimum
often more in the six weeks time frame."

So if Sony wants professionals to use their cameras
They have to change that. The could potentially
Use the existing NPS network and extend it.

Nikon also has a lot of experience of taking Sony
Designs and making them into better chips.

But

Many of you say the company cultures are
Incompatible. What a pity.
You are out there. You and your camera. You can shoot or not shoot as you please. Discover the world, Your world. Show it to us. Or we might never see it.

Me: https://youpic.com/photographer/frankfremerey/

Ilkka Nissilä

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #42 on: November 08, 2016, 23:25:21 »
So if Sony wants professionals to use their cameras
They have to change that. The could potentially
Use the existing NPS network and extend it.

But do they want to? My experience with Sony service is with a VAIO laptop which would crash daily until it wouldn't even boot. Sony offered absolutely nothing to me to solve the problem, and told me to contact Microsoft. Microsoft said they provide no support to OEM Windows such as the one used on the Sony. Sony offered absolutely no service, refund, fix, compensation to me. Nothing at all. I had an expensive laptop which was practically worthless.

Nikon on the other hand. Let's see. I dropped my D800 and the AF went off calibration. I took it in to JAS, told them what happened. It was out of warranty by that time. Nikon paid for the repairs, no questions asked, even though the fault was with me and it was not under warranty.

My 24 PC's shift lock stopped working after about six months of use. I took it in to service at JAS. They called me back and told me they didn't have the parts but that Nikon told them to give me a new lens, which I went to pick up, unopened in a box. Nikon didn't need any repair personnel or NPS for that - it's all about the attitude towards a customer's problem.

Nikon has no repair personnel working for them in Finland; they outsourced repair to a JAS who also does Canon etc. repairs. Sony could easily do that as well and get similar repair turnaround as Nikon or Canon. But do they want to provide service? My experience suggests that they perhaps don't. Sony just basically stated that my problem was not their problem - bugger off. Of course my experience was with a laptop, not a camera, but I will never forget that experience. It makes me bite my teeth in anger. If I had had any money, I would have contacted a lawyer. Instead I just swallowed my loss.

I don't want such poisonous attitude to infect Nikon. Thus I am happy if Nikon partner with Sony to make components such as sensors but keep their own attitude towards customer service.

I am not saying my experience is to be generalized. But when Sony first bought Konica-Minolta's camera business, I was interested in them because they had the sensor based anti-shake feature. I asked the most prominent camera store why they didn't keep any Sony DSLRs on display. The senior salesman there simply stated they had had really poor experience with Sony service and therefore would no longer sell any Sony DSLRs. (At that time they were still DSLRs, I think.)

Quote
Nikon also has a lot of experience of taking Sony
Designs and making them into better chips.

Currently the problem seems that Sony bought Toshiba's sensor making facility and if I'm not mistaken, also the facility where Renesas made sensors for Nikon and they decided to consolidate large sensor manufacture in one place. Which then suffered under the Kumamoto Earthquake. Brilliant.

It would be better if one company did not have such influence, rather that factories making critical parts were distributed in different places so that there is not a total loss if one factory is hit by a natural disaster. So I would think Sony buying everyone is just not a good idea.
More manufacturers, more competition, lower prices, and less volatility in the industry. Canon is now doing well (8% increase in ILC sales) because they make their sensors elsewhere and they seem to have solved their base ISO DR issue for the most part in their own sensors, and they have some brilliant technology (dual pixel AF).

I really liked it when Nikon worked with several partners to make the sensors for their cameras. It gave Nikon the ability to choose the best technology and made them less vulnerable to what happens at any one factory. If Sony were to buy Nikon it would be the end of collaborating with other companies to make sensors. Thus it would mean that a loss of one factory would mean the end of camera production for possibly a long time. This is not a good strategy.

I guess it could be deduced that I am angry with Sony. I am a little angry, yes, because of my laptop experience, but even more I dislike the fact that they stopped making cameras with OVFs. These things combined simply tell me that I want absolutely nothing to do with them as a customer. I cannot inject my personality and shooting experience into the photographs if I have to use an EVF to compose the image and decide when to press the shutter. I simply cannot accept that 25 years of learning to understand human emotion and its visual cues in order to make better photographs would be thrown into the toilet because the EVF simply doesn't show these cues and distracts my brain with moving jaggies and other artifacts. It's the most important skill I have acquired in life so far.

For those photographers who like EVFs, can and want to use them (shooting subjects or with a technique where they have more advantages than disadvantages), I can see how they would feel the opposite of how I feel. There is a lot of manufacturers who make cameras with EVFs so I don't see Nikon's relative absence from this market a huge problem. Nikon see the OVF as their great advantage, as do I.

bjornthun

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Re: [Link] Sony to buy Nikon soon?
« Reply #43 on: November 09, 2016, 00:33:35 »
Nikon is going to restructure the company. They will re-assign or give early retirement to 1,550 employees. The goal is to reduce the workforce by 1,000 people. Link here: http://nikon.com/news/2016/20161108_1_e.pdf

350 employees will be cut from the Imaging division.

Nikon is continuing the diwnward trend with lower sales of ILC, compacts and lenses also for the period July-September of 2016.

Nikon will do a write-off for the fiscal year 2017 and due to this, they forecast a loss for the fiscal year 2017.

However, as Thom Hogan points out, Nikon is not on the verge of bankruptcy, but is just shrinking.

Canon cites good sales of both DSLRs (5D mkIV and 80D) and mirrorless (EOS M) as drivers for an increase in ILC sales. Compacts sales are abyssmal, however. Canon imaging as a whole is down.