Photography
Related: About this forumPublic service announcement:
No commercial spam
Do not post commercial spam or hawk commercial products or services.
Why we have this rule: It's fine for established members to plug or post links to their own products, services, or publications every now and again, but we do not wish to provide free advertising space for spammers.
Apparently this means that if once a year or so a piece of popular software goes on sale for 70% off we are not supposed to alert our fellow photographers about it. Or if a piece of hardware goes on sale at unheard of discounts that will also be hidden.
FFS, that's like being hidden in the Cooking & Baking group for telling everyone, "Hey guys! Butterball is on sale for .39 a pound at the MegaMart!"
CaliforniaPeggy
(152,472 posts)They are often easy to spot, since they really have no other reason to be here.
The occasional mention of a product is not spamming. It is a public service. PERIOD.
AndyS
(14,559 posts)The TOS say, "It's fine for established members to plug or post links to their own products, services, or publications every now and again."
I've been here since 2005 and have a few posts under my belt so I guess I qualify as 'established'. I guess 'their own products etc' may be a grey area but I am dedicated to the art and craft of photography. I am also dedicated to advancing this craft in any way I can. I try to passively teach and lift those aspiring to improve and at the same time I admire and emulate those who inspire me.
On those rare occasions I find tools that may appeal to my fellow photographers or save them money in their growth I want to make them aware. I do not benefit in any way for sales or promotion of these products.
If that's a violation of TOS I suppose I'll just have to live with it. If I have offended anyone here in the Photo Group I apologize. That said I don't plan to stop promoting, sharing and learning this most wonderful and expressive craft.
MichaelSoE
(1,576 posts)and thought to myself, "What has he done this time?" Thanks for the info regarding the post's decimation and elimination.
So sorry I wasn't chosen for jury duty.
AndyS
(14,559 posts)HAB911
(9,371 posts)to cause chaos. In GD I call them pearl clutchers that parse every comma and period. Generally the jury system is great but it doesn't allow for much nuance or context.
AndyS
(14,559 posts)Like you said it works most times and I'd not want to be without it. Still sometimes it fails to take context into account. Just depends on the Jury and how they relate to the situation.
Gato Moteado
(9,970 posts)...manufacturer or retailer deals coming down the pike. this is relevant and useful stuff for people in this group.
why would anyone think that stuff violates the TOS?
AndyS
(14,559 posts)the photo industry is a different sort of retail environment. The average consumer is accustomed to seeing SUPER SALE! PRICE REDUCED! at every opportunity. Camera's were once like that and it almost killed the retail market.
Now when a new first gen product is introduced a manufacturer tries to recover R&D costs before any 'sale price' is established. So if a product is price reduced in the first year or so it's a big deal. If some product has been difficult to ship like, just picking a product at random, the OM1 and it's discounted 20% or some other phenomenal amount at some large retailer like say, Amazon? and it's reduced $420 that would be worthy of note. Ya' know kinda' like a news headline?
I think I'll post a 'history' of the camera retail market from my own experience.
Gato Moteado
(9,970 posts)Last edited Sun Nov 27, 2022, 01:17 PM - Edit history (1)
...when i was growing up (in the 70s) i don't remember big box retailers carrying cameras, and if they did (say sears or JCP), the selection was tiny and some models might have even been branded especially for the retailer (sears did this on all kinds of merchandise). i bought my first cameras and all gear from central camera in downtown chicago. it was a typical downtown specialty retailer; it looked like it hadn't been remodeled since the days of al capone and it was disorganized, crowded and unfriendly (all the inventory was stacked up half-way to the ceiling behind the douche-baggy, impatient salesmen on the other side of the counter), but that's the type of place where people went for camera gear. later, smaller photo stores starting popping up in malls, but they didn't seem to cater to pros or advanced hobbyists...their selection was limited mainly to entry level cameras and 3rd party lenses...most of their revenue, i imagine, came from processing film and printing. i also remember full-page, black and white ads in the backs of magazines for places like "abe's of main" and the like, with prices substantially lower than the real photography retail stores and with little or no fine print regarding the fact that they sold only gray market gear or any explanation at all of what gray market gear even was.
now pricing doesn't seem to be controlled by retailers anymore. amazon prices on new gear are the same as best buy and the same as even the most crotchety, stuck-up downtown specialty stores...which is why i only buy from real photography stores (even if they're stuck up and crotchety) rather than supporting big chains. while i'm not looking at the same industry rags i did in the 70s, i'm not seeing any kind of gray market ads anymore.
i guess the manufacturers set the MSRP now and all the sellers must toe the line. that is good for we the consumers, i think.
regarding central camera back in the day, here is a more recent photo (the nikon D300 musta been the big seller at the time of the photo) of what it looked like from the outside. IMHO, the storefront windows were the best part of the store...i'd stand out there for 20 minutes studying all the items in the window which included museum quality antique equipment mixed in with unboxed display models of the discontinued or sales items for that week, with a hand-written price card propped up against each one.
inside the store, a narrow aisle went straight to the back. new and used camera and lens counters were up front and other supplies, darkroom goods and books were just past that and went all the way to the back. in the winter, with everyone bundled up, it always seemed more crowded and a person with a parka on could barely fit by themselves down the aisle once you got past the camera counters, which was made even more impassable by the cluttering of piled up sales items like photographic paper or books right on the edges of the walkway. i've noticed in recent photos, they've modernized and cleaned it all up a little and organized the place. this is kinda what i remember it looking like inside:
anyway, central camera is a chicago institution. here's their website, which kinda looks like it hasn't been updated since 1899:
https://centralcamera.com/
Gato Moteado
(9,970 posts)...after i finished the above post, i did a search for cameras sold by sears....this article explains the deal ricoh made with sears and how they rebranded their SLRs to be sears brand cameras:
https://www.aperturepreview.com/the-legacy-of-ricoh-and-sears
do you remember these?
moonshinegnomie
(2,922 posts)Gato Moteado
(9,970 posts)thanks for reviving those dead memory cells!
Gato Moteado
(9,970 posts)...just south of, maybe, addison or belmont (IIRC) where college students went for gear. i don't think they had a selection of cameras much outside of what students would have had budgets for but they had all kinds of film processing equipment and chemicals and papers. i bought my film developing tanks and stuff there, back when i was enrolled in photography classes at loyola.
do you remember that place?