unfocused
Photos/Photo Book Reviews: www.thecuriouseye.com
First, let me say that I generally agree with you, jebbrady, and this is not meant to challenge or argue against your viewpoint. It is just that this section has me a bit confused:
My first reaction would be to say that if it were Robert Johnson reviewing the guitar it might be most helpful for Clapton.
But, seriously, I'm not sure what the point is here. To follow your analogy a little further, I would say that having Jimi, Stevie Ray and BB King review three different guitars and offer their opinions in a totally personal, unscientific and biased (as in colored by their own preferences and experiences) might be more useful.
Now, to move that to cameras: No one uses (or at least should use) a camera in a completely controlled, repeatable, laboratory setting. If a reviewer tests the autofocus of three cameras by shooting a basketball game and comes back and says that in their opinion camera "B" had the most reliable autofocus, I know that it is impossible to draw a precise and repeatable comparison between the three cameras, but rather I'm relying on the reviewer's own experience. I can reject that experience or take it into consideration, my choice.
It seems like some people on this forum want to seize on these kinds of reviews and argue because they don't feel the results are uniformly "scientific." I don't care, I'd rather know the person's opinion. And, if that person happens to have a bias for or against a specific brand? So what? Just take that into consideration. Reviewers are human beings and we should treat their reviews as written by humans offering their opinion.
Thus, if I had any talent for music I'd rather get the "impressions" of three guitars from Hendrix, SRV and BB King than expect them to conduct scientific experiments on the guitars.
jebrady03 said:If Eric Clapton were deciding between 3 guitars, do you think it would be helpful to have Stevie Ray Vaughn, BB King, and Jimi Hendrix review the same guitar and tell him all about it? I mean, besides the fact that it would be AWESOME to have all 3 of those guys back and playing again, how meaningful would their analysis be to Mr Clapton if they all reviewed only one guitar, and it happened to be the same guitar? For sure, we could say that the guitarist makes a difference in how the guitar is played and thus, what comes out of it. But so what? SRV, BBK, and JH aren't looking to buy the guitar, Mr Clapton is. And the skills those 3 "reviewers" posses aren't the exact same skills Mr Clapton possesses and thus, Mr Clapton will necessarily obtain different results. So how are their reviews relevant? Answer: They're not. Not without context. And if all 3 legendary guitarists reviewed all 3 options that Mr Clapton is considering and COMPARED THEM TO ONE ANOTHER USING A CONTROLLED, REPEATABLE METHODOLOGY then THAT would be useful to Mr Clapton. Would it not?
My first reaction would be to say that if it were Robert Johnson reviewing the guitar it might be most helpful for Clapton.
But, seriously, I'm not sure what the point is here. To follow your analogy a little further, I would say that having Jimi, Stevie Ray and BB King review three different guitars and offer their opinions in a totally personal, unscientific and biased (as in colored by their own preferences and experiences) might be more useful.
Now, to move that to cameras: No one uses (or at least should use) a camera in a completely controlled, repeatable, laboratory setting. If a reviewer tests the autofocus of three cameras by shooting a basketball game and comes back and says that in their opinion camera "B" had the most reliable autofocus, I know that it is impossible to draw a precise and repeatable comparison between the three cameras, but rather I'm relying on the reviewer's own experience. I can reject that experience or take it into consideration, my choice.
It seems like some people on this forum want to seize on these kinds of reviews and argue because they don't feel the results are uniformly "scientific." I don't care, I'd rather know the person's opinion. And, if that person happens to have a bias for or against a specific brand? So what? Just take that into consideration. Reviewers are human beings and we should treat their reviews as written by humans offering their opinion.
Thus, if I had any talent for music I'd rather get the "impressions" of three guitars from Hendrix, SRV and BB King than expect them to conduct scientific experiments on the guitars.
Upvote
0