The next revolution

Time waits for no one.

There have been three revolutions since the invention of photography in the early 19th century.



Roger Fenton’s assistant in 1855 with his photo gear. The horse was extra.

The first was miniaturization, credited to German engineer Oskar Barnack who invented the Leica in 1913. The Leica user could take 36 images on one roll of film, loadable in daylight thanks to the cassette design, and enjoy decent quality not really that much worse in pocket prints from that delivered by the monster cameras which preceded this piece of design genius. Leica continues to this day but long ago ceased making cameras, remaining in existence as a purveyor of overpriced jewelry.



Barnack’s genius writ small.

The second revolution was the invention of the digital sensor camera for which we can thank Kodak. Being abject fools they concluded that film would last forever, abandoning digital, making one of the worst business decisions of the 20th century in the process. They went bankrupt. Steven Sasson was the Brooklyn born engineer behind this revolution (not the bankruptcy) and while his first design was anything but compact, rapid development of sensors fixed that.



Sasson with his invention. Genius writ large.

Digital sensor sizes are now whatever you want, from monsters divining distant galaxies in outer space to pin heads in digital cameras much loved by the Kremlin.

The third revolution was in the creation of the cell phone camera, and while the nutty genius running Apple could not claim the company had invented cell phone photography, he very much packaged the whole thing in a device that would become ubiquitous, user friendly and now delivering more images than any of its predecessors did in aggregate.



A man who is very much missed.

Now while no one could accuse today’s automaton CEO of Apple of ever having had an original idea, time marches on and, despite Apple’s characterless leadership, really good small sensors are now available in the latest iPhone, the four lensed iPhone 11Pro. What the business community expected to be just one more modest product refresh turns out to be at the cutting edge of the cell phone photography revolution. And that cutting edge performance is delivered with really small sensors.

The percentage of photographers needing large sensors in large bodies is minuscule, a statistic which predicts the rapid demise of all traditional cameras, be they medium format, FF, APS-C or MFT in format. Medium format and FF digital will retain infinitesimal market shares for specialized commercial and scientific purposes, but otherwise their time is done. And as for APS-C and MFT, with the latest cell phone cameras equalling or beating their output in terms of quality and versatility, those formats will shortly be indistinguishable from toast. A very tough time to be Canon, or even worse, Nikon. As for Panasonic and Sony, they can stick to making ever larger TV sets.

The cutting edge cell phone photographer has access to depth maps with his images, selective focus of his choice, multiple lenses with the wide in the Pro being very wide indeed and a Night Mode so spectacular that Walter Mandler must be spinning in his grave. Oh! and did I mention 4K video, all in a wafer thin package which also just happens to make phone calls and works seamlessly with the internet? And that photographer does all of this with the most sophisticated CPU and brilliant software design available, neither feature found in traditional cameras.

The new iPhone’s three forward facing lens design is nothing new. Leica and many movie cameras have had it for ages. No, ‘selfies’ were out. No fourth lens for you.



Early 1950s Leica three lens camera attachment. 35/50/90mm focal length choices, f/2.8-4. Weight? A lot.

But now the lens in the ‘turret’ is chosen with a touch, nothing moves, it’s stabilized for all but the ultrawide option, and you choose the depth of field after taking the picture:



Apple updates the turret.13/26/52mm options. f/1.8-2.4. Yes, that’s 13mm. Weight? Unnoticeable.

The above is all by way of a preamble to my upcoming purchase of an iPhone 11Pro. I’m sticking with Apple as only an insane person would trust Google/Android with his data and, yes, all my MFT hardware is being sold as I write. I’m getting with the plan before it becomes completely worthless. It’s been a fun decade since that groundbreaking Panasonic G1.

I’ll keep a few items of Nikon FF digital and film gear, as they are already worthless, and as I still have vestiges of nostalgia in my psyche. But, as a street snapper, I can see no reason to actually use this megalithic gear. And I try very hard, in an increasingly uncluttered life, to avoid owning things I do not use.

The old cliché has it that “the best camera is the one you have with you“. You always have your cell phone with you.