But before the X100 series became a cult classic, Fujifilm released a piece of software that was ahead of its time—yet so niche that most users have never heard of it. We are talking about .
MS01 looked like a cash register terminal for a photo lab in 1998. It was not user-friendly. It required reading a manual to figure out how to export a JPEG.
It is clunky, slow, and broken by modern standards—but for those five minutes in 2004 when a Velvia simulation rendered perfectly on a CRT monitor, it was pure magic.
But before the X100 series became a cult classic, Fujifilm released a piece of software that was ahead of its time—yet so niche that most users have never heard of it. We are talking about .
MS01 looked like a cash register terminal for a photo lab in 1998. It was not user-friendly. It required reading a manual to figure out how to export a JPEG.
It is clunky, slow, and broken by modern standards—but for those five minutes in 2004 when a Velvia simulation rendered perfectly on a CRT monitor, it was pure magic.