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GE Digital Cameras Launched

Mark Goldstein | Digital Compact Cameras | February 13, 2007 | 5 Comments |

GE Digital CamerasPMA 2007: GE have announced aggressive plans to enter the digital camera market. Entry-level GE digital cameras will start with 7 megapixels of resolution and 2.5-inch LCD screens. Higher-end GE cameras will offer up to 12 megapixels of resolution and 3-inch LCD screens. A photo printer will also be included in the line-up. The new products will be distributd by General Imaging, a new, privately held company that serves as the exclusive worldwide licensee for the GE line of digital cameras and printers. Cameras will be available in North America from mid-April, whilst shipments to Europe and Asia are scheduled for later this year. The GE digital cameras will make their debut at the PMA show in early March.

General Imaging Press Release

GE Enters Digital Camera Market; General Imaging Named Exclusive Worldwide Licensee

NEW YORK—(BUSINESS WIRE)—Already one of the most trusted consumer brands in the world, GE will soon become one of the hottest names in high-quality digital still cameras.

GE and corporate newcomer General Imaging Co. announced today that the two companies have reached an exclusive worldwide licensing agreement by which General Imaging will design, manufacture and distribute an all-new line of GE-branded digital cameras.

“We were seeking to enter the digital camera arena and found a perfect partner,” said Brad Irvine, GE President of Trading and Licensing. “The cameras from General Imaging are truly worthy of the GE name, representative of GE’s leadership in technology and innovation.”

General Imaging Co. Chairman and CEO Hiroshi “Hugh” Komiya said the GE brand comes with instant credibility.

”GE is a brand that consumers around the world know and trust,” he said. “This is a brand known for innovation and technical leadership. We fully intend to deliver on the GE brand promise and even further enhance the GE brand value.”

Headquartered in Torrance, California, General Imaging brings together an all-star cast of photo industry veterans. Komiya is a former president of Olympus Imaging Corporation.

Leading sales efforts in North America will be Rene Buhay, a former Vice-President of Global Sales for ArcSoft who had also headed North American sales for both Samsung and Ricoh. Noted industrial designer Takeyoshi Kawano will be the company’s chief designer. Kawano’s design credits include the Sony Walkman, the Sony VAIO computer and the Olympus Stylus camera series.

“Style will play an important part in our product development,” Kawano noted. “Consumers are demanding not just advanced features but stylish designs. We’re responding to that demand with cameras that are a statement of style and at the same time have all the latest technology.”

According to Kawano, advanced features such as image stabilization, high ISO sensitivity, and panoramic stitching will be standard on ALL models.

“With advanced features like this on all our cameras, it will be difficult to take a bad photo,” he said. “GE cameras will literally change the quality of pictures for today’s consumers.”

Entry-level GE digital cameras will start with 7 megapixels of resolution and 2.5-inch LCD screens. Higher-end GE cameras will offer up to 12 megapixels of resolution and 3-inch LCD screens. A photo printer will also be included in the line.

The GE digital cameras will make their debut at the annual Photo Marketing Association trade show, March 8-11, in Las Vegas. Cameras will be available in North America from mid-April. Shipments to Europe and Asia are scheduled for later this year.

Buhay believes that response to the new camera line from retailers and consumers alike will be overwhelming.

“I’ve been in the electronics field for many years, and the GE cameras are like nothing I’ve ever seen before,” he said. “Our aim is to be Number 1 in all aspects – quality, technology, performance and value – and these cameras will do that.”

For more information go to http://www.ge.com/digitalcameras

GE Digital Cameras



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Your Comments

5 Comments so far | Post a comment

#1 david

“With advanced features like this on all our cameras, it will be difficult to take a bad photo,” he said. “GE cameras will literally change the quality of pictures for today’s consumers.”

wow. this is huge.

7:26 pm - Tuesday, February 13, 2007

#2 Nicholas

Please remember the old saying " It is the violinist, not the violin."
Photographers knowing all about lighting will always be in demand, regardless of how 'good' everyone's pictures will be due to good cameras.
IMHO.

5:03 am - Wednesday, February 14, 2007

#3 Mike Zdancewicz

Are these guys nuts? They are joining the digital camera market now, with a zillion entrenched suppliers?? I bet they give it up in 1 year, after bleeding profusely in the market.

6:04 am - Wednesday, February 14, 2007

#4 Nicholas

With GE's distribution system, and promise of highest quality, we will all benefit from their stirring the pot.
I hope they attempt to revitalze the Prosumer camera market (R-1, etc.) by introducing a Pro Prosumer camera for the wedding photographers of the world.

1:09 pm - Wednesday, February 14, 2007

#5 Zoltanus

Not so fast, Mike - General Electric is one of the biggest corporations in the world. They are not only involved in the aerospace and lighting business, there is GE Money Bank and God knows how many other companies that belong to the GE business empire. A player like that is not planning for 1 year, especially when entering a new field. Bet they will be pouring tons of money into marketing in the beginning, and will not expect the camera department to turn profitable within the first 3 or even 5 years.

A sad tendency is that most true photography brands are struggling, while electronics giants are gaining ground at their expense. Contax, Forte and Minolta are out of the photography business already, Leica has been on the verge of collapse for some time, and if you look at the latest reports on the US camera market you'll find that with the exception of Canon and Nikon, traditional photography brands are losing out to the likes of Samsung, Panasonic and Casio. These were the fastest-growing brands in 2006 by the number of units shipped and are all among the top 10 in the US digital camera market by market share. Samsung has already overtaken Fujifilm and is in the heels of Olympus, one of the longest established names in photography.

This is not making me happy, but it is a tendency that GE has seen and now acts upon.

5:55 pm - Wednesday, February 14, 2007

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