The current issue even contains one of my pictures—it's the big circular fish-eye shot in the article about legacy lenses on digital mirrorless cameras, taken with a Minolta MD Fish-eye Rokkor 7.5 mm 1:4 lens. However the camera used was not a Sony NEX (as falsely stated in the caption) but a Leica M9—in fact, that was my point in the first place when I submitted this picture. You need a full-frame camera to capture the fish-eye's whole image circle but on a Leica M, you cannot focus non-M lenses ... which doesn't matter with this particular lens, because it's fixed-focus anyway, but in general that's a problem.
To take full advantage of old 35-mm-format SLR lenses for today's digital photography, you'd need a digital camera that has
- (1) a 35-mm full-frame sensor, and
(2) a short-register lens mount, and
(3) live view.