Blog Entry 200

I can’t believe I’ve already published 200 entries in this blog. And even more unbelievable, that those pages have been viewed (and I hope read) more than half a million times. To all, thank you for your patience with me and my ramblings.

When I was younger, I used to write for a paycheck. In the French IT press. And I hated the deadlines. I was always procrastinating, and as a result was spending the night before each deadline, writing. I don’t know why writing was such a pain for me at that time. I liked the “before” – collecting the information, testing, comparing, analyzing -, I liked the “after” (reading the finished article, first on my computer, then in the published magazines), but I did not especially like the “writing” phase at the center of the whole process.

It was stressful. First, there was the pressure of the deadline. Second, being vague, inaccurate or factually wrong was not an option.


Selfie. Pentax 17. Fujifilm Acros 2.

In the times of paper magazines, publishing an article was a serious business. Readers were paying for their copies of the magazines, and they expected accuracy. There were tens of thousands of regular readers. And millions of French Francs of advertising money at stake. You worked hard to be sure that what you were writing was accurate, and you checked your facts twice – because nothing was worse than being proven wrong by a reader, or by the company distributing the product you had just tested. Because if you had it wrong, you had to publish a correction in the next issue. The walk of shame.

Now, I write for pleasure. Primarily about old or niche products. No paycheck, no deadline. No editor to respond to. No pressure. And I enjoy the whole thing. The research, the tests, the fact checking, the development of ideas, and the writing itself. And the interaction with you, readers and fellow bloggers.

It’s much easier (and immediate) to interact with you than it was in the times of the “letters to the editor” in monthly magazines. And although I still try to be thorough, if I get something wrong, you’ll let me know in the comments, and I’ll fix it. Not a huge issue.

In the ocean of negativity and hate that some portions of the Internet have become, I’m grateful that the comments section of this blog has remained an island of civility.

So, thank you again. Meet you again in a few days for Blog Entry #201.


The blog entry ranking – Tokina 28-70 f/2.8, Fujica screw mount SLRs, Angenieux 28-70 – it pays to propose content that can not be found anywhere else.

One of the oldest pictures of this blog is featured at the top of this entry (Charleston, SC – April 2009 – shot on film, probably with a Nikon FM).

This one is one of the most recent. Digital, shot with the camera most likely to be in my bags when I travel, the Olympus Tough TG-5.

(Long Beach, CA – April 2026 – Olympus TG-5)

What happened on December 4, 2024 ?
Why Dec 4th, 2024? I had published a review of the Olympus TG-4 the day before.
Chattahoochee National Recreation Area – the bamboo forest – Olympus TG-4

More in CamerAgX


One last look at 2024….

This blog is running on WordPress, and they provide basic statistics about this site’s traffic, that I’m sharing with you.

Approximately 52,000 of you visited Cameragx.com last year, for a total number of 69,000 page views. Those numbers have been fairly constant over the last few post-COVID years. Thank you.

As can be expected (since this blog is written in English), traffic is originating primarily from English speaking countries.

More interesting is to look at the most popular posts.

CamerAgX in 2024 – most popular pages

Pentax P30, Fuji STX-2, Yashica FX-3 Super 2000, all entry level, manual focus, single lens reflex cameras primarily used by learners, and less expensive than the Canon AE-1 that people new to film photography tend to buy as their first film camera.

A few years ago, there was more interest in Nikon cameras, and less in Pentax SLRs.

the same stats collected in January 2020

There seems to be a constant interest for all things Fujica, Fuji and Fujifilm – I happen to like to current crop of Fujifilm digital cameras, and a few of their SLRs from the seventies – I still believe that the ST-801 is an all time great. In-between, there are cameras like the bayonet mount SLRs from the late seventies (the AX series) which are not very well known, and for which CamerAgX is one of the rare sources of information. By the way, the index of all the cameras reviewed in those columns has been updated recently.

Recently, I’ve introduced more content related to digital cameras or to the digital workflow, but I’ll keep on reviewing film cameras in the future as well – with a focus on relatively unknown, still inexpensive, really compact cameras of the eighties and nineties.

Feel free to provide suggestions.

That being said, I wish you a Happy New Year, and plenty of success in your photographic endeavours.

X.T.


Tokyo – Tea at the Hamarikyu Gardens – Fujifilm X-T4
Tokyo – Tsukiji River – Fujifilm X-T4.
Tokyo – sake barrels at the Meiji Jingu – Fujifilm X-T4