Sure, having a 3" OLED display on the back of the camera for reviewing seems obvious NOW, but back in the early 1990s, it was anything but. At one point I owned a Kodak DCS200, which was only their second pro-grade DSLR. Something like $18K new (but I paid around $350 because the SF Post was dumping them on eBay) It was essentially a stock Nikon 8008s film body with a 1 megapixel digital back grafted on, and it had an internal 2.5" SCSI hard drive. To download photos, yup, you had to connect via SCSI and access the camera's storage using Kodak's Photoshop plug-in, because the drive didn't appear on the Mac desktop. Can you imagine having to shut down your computer every time you wanted to grab some photos? Oh, and it didn't have a color LCD either, just a tiny monochrome status display. Modern amenities like a large color screen and CF card storage occurred a little bit later.
I was fortunate to own a Quicktake 100 when it was still a very new item! Too bad I lost a lot of photos simply because I had nowhere to put them all, so I deleted a lot. No Zip or affordable CD-R drives at the time, and my Duo 230 had only a 40 megabyte drive and I was forever filling it up.