toshiro escribió:La oficial del régimen??? pero si tan solo en la URSS hubo más fabricantes y modelos que en el mismísimo Japón en la misma época
http://www.sovietcams.com/index.php?358713866
Por no hablar de la ética detras de alguna de esas fábricas, nada que ver con la explotación capitalista en Occidente:
The FED factory in Kharkov in Ukraine was founded as a children's commune, for children orphaned or displaced by the combined upheavals of the First World War, the Revolution and the subsequent civil war. The Dzerzhinsky commune was set up and directed by educationalist Anton Makarenko, who had previously run the Gorky Colony, also a commune for children, combining education and practical training. Whereas the Gorky Colony had been mostly agricultural, The Dzerzhinsky Commune trained children in skills such as carpentry, sewing, shoemaking and locksmithing. The products were sold, and the children were paid wages. In 1932 a new workshop was opened, making electric drills, the first in the Soviet Union.
Also in 1932, a work unit was set up to plan the production of cameras. The first three examples were made in October of that year, with lenses made by VOOMP in Leningrad, and the feat was reported in the national newspaper Izvestiya, where the cameras were described only as 'Soviet Leicas'. These were copies of the Leica A, with an uncoupled rangefinder only as an accessory. However, Leitz had meanwhile produced the Leica II, with a built-in coupled rangefinder. By the end of 1933, the factory had made only about 30 of its cameras. In 1934, true production began of a Leica II copy, now with lenses made by FED; about 4000 were made in the first year.
FED has produced many millions of cameras.
Así que en la muy terrible URSS si te quedabas huérfano el Estado no solo cuidaba de tí, también te formaba y te daba un oficio. En cambio en la Rusia capitalista actual si te quedas huérfano ya sabemos lo que te espera. Malditos comunistas
Más le valía, con las decenas de millones de padres que ha asesinado el estado...