Brian Timmons
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Apparently this is real. Surprised like anyone else.
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I'm pretty sure that this means that RED as a product line will cease to exist. Same with this forum?
Who needs a red forum when there won't be red anymore, is what I meant by that.Last time I checked, Landmine is the owner of this place...
Well, we have seen other purchaces that have worked out quite well. Hasselblad have not exactly suffered under DJI, they still make great cameras.But I can't shake the prediction that this will tumble down into a big mess, that we are now probably witnessing the beginning of the end of Red cinema cameras, regardless of the marketing jargon surrounding this acquisition. Nikon will assimilate all the tech developed by Red, chew it and spit out their own lineup of cameras in the attempt to balance the scales against Sony and Canon.
Well, we have seen other purchaces that have worked out quite well. Hasselblad have not exactly suffered under DJI, they still make great cameras.
When asked if this had the potential to affect cases in the past and future, Maddrey says it’s possible.
“For other companies who might look at this case, it would only make sense that if you have a blueprint to a settlement in front of you, which this could possibly be, you would follow up on it — as long as the previous battles were not dismissed with or without prejudice,” he explains.
First time I have ever totally agreed with you. Sad.Well, this feels like a "told you so" moment as I've said numerous times that the competition of lower cost cameras will start to eat up the reasons to buy into the expensive lineup of Red cameras. Maybe "The Creator" was the final straw, showing how an IMAX movie can actually be filmed on a cheaper camera.
The fact that this is a 100% takeover and not just a a major stake in the company hints at a coming decline in Red Cinema. I wouldn't be surprised if Red gets killed off and that the purchase of the company was purely to acquire the cinema camera tech to implement in their own cinema camera lineup. Nikon has been struggling against Canon and Sony so this feels like a desperate attempt at pushing into a valuable space to compete with everyone else. I mean, who's seen a Nikon brand on anything used for video and cinema capture? Let alone for photography? Sony and Canon dominate still photography and aren't stopping with innovation. Buying Red seems like a last resort attempt at getting any kind of part of the action.
But I can't shake the prediction that this will tumble down into a big mess, that we are now probably witnessing the beginning of the end of Red cinema cameras, regardless of the marketing jargon surrounding this acquisition. Nikon will assimilate all the tech developed by Red, chew it and spit out their own lineup of cameras in the attempt to balance the scales against Sony and Canon.