Canon EOS R3 Mark II Coming the First Week of February?

The Canon EOS R3 Mark II rumor fest is back in full force apparently. We are receiving an increasing number of emails about the camera coming in the next few months. I talked about a new R3 earlier this month and I'm of the belief that if it doesn't come before CP+ at the end […]

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If there is R3 with 50MP sensor, than the R5III will have to have something much bigger than that so it will contonue to be "different" from it. The R1 will be the "fastest" thing around with lower resolution (as the 1D were) the R5 will be the "camera with the most MP" and the R3 will be somewhere in the middle while it features new things that later will come to the R1 (2) and the R5 (3).
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PhotonsToPhotos does the Canon EOS R5 Mark II and it’s good

The R5 is actually superior to the R5ii for landscapes etc. The R5 is still superb for action work but the R5ii is even better, the AF is faster and it recognises birds at even greater distances. And it has pre-capture. I am sure Canon could have done a firmware upgrade on the R5 but it chose not too to make the R5ii more attractive.
Both the R6iii or R5ii are terrific cameras, easily the finest that Canon have ever made. Really, it comes down to price point, lower noise at higher iso vs sensor read out speed.
I think the AF improvements in the R5ii are a big jump over the R5, as well as the stacked sensor, the R6iii is less of a drastic improvement over the R6ii, but very much over the original R6 or even the Eos R.
I’ve enjoyed my short time with the R5, however, the weaker AF is irritating me a bit. I might save for a R5ii later in 2026.
I have a few lenses I need to purchase in 2026, so for me…lenses first, camera bodies 2nd.
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Real world RF 28-70 2.8 IS results?

I'm doing something wrong because I couldn't even get a burst of flowers to be effective enough
Maybe I am using longer lenses for near macro, like the RF 100-400mm at 0.4x at about a metre/yard, it's easier. For flowers, I wouldn't use a burst but focus on the nearest part, take a shot, then turn through a small angle top something further away, and then a few more. The slight changes in angle have little adverse effect usually.
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Canon EOS R3 Mark II Coming the First Week of February?

A high res R3 II would make some sense to me - and it could be something I'd consider buying... depending on the whole package.
A global shutter R3 II would make less sense to me since it could be faster than the R1 which would "threaten" its "sport flagship" status.
The main selling point of the R1 is speed + high iso image quality combined, not speed alone
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Canon EOS R3 Mark II Coming the First Week of February?

Multimedia focused R3 ii might be something close to global shutter.
Canon is very conservative, maybe they say 2msec readout (just a number thrown in by me) is close to global shutter and they try to keep other parameters high instead of sacrificing something for global shutter.
Partially stacked might be the only thing to achieve this to bring the data rates from the sensor arrangement to the CPU down during the actual readout.
For me I will maybe wait if this trickles down to e.g. an R7 iii ... if R7 ii will not surprise us with that feature.
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Mushrooms And Fungi Of Any Kind

Sorry for the late answer but for an answer to your question one can write a book...
What exactly "properties"?
If you mean the toxicity of some species: what is toxic to the humans is not toxic for some animals (and opposite!). The Dead Cap (Amanita phalloides) is highly toxic (up to deadly) for us but for example squirrels (and many others!) enjoy them, same for many other toxic mushrooms that I know. And I'm giving an example with only the mammals (insects, slugs - they use to eat toxic mushrooms for breakfast!). They don't need us to spread their spores!
Some other properties (here for simplicity I will sample just what Oyster mushrooms can do...).
1. Ability to degrade the lignin from the lignocellulose is giving them food source - easily consuming the cellulose (and that is sugar! - yes, the paper that we use is form of sugar!).
2. Powerful enzymatic system that is able to break many other molecules - food source.
3. Did you know they have a micro-structures that can capture nematodes (tiny worms) and utilize them for a food?

And there are so many other features like an antibiotics production, symbiotic properties e.t.c. all of them correlated with the ability to survive and evolve.
Other features are just a byproduct of their metabolism - like the anti-cancer properties of some fungi that we can use but can't explain what advantage that fungi have from it.
Thank you! It's enough to make me interested in finding a book!
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Mushrooms And Fungi Of Any Kind

Because I can't resist going off topic, does anyone know the evolutionary advantages of various properties of mushrooms?
Sorry for the late answer but for an answer to your question one can write a book...
What exactly "properties"?
If you mean the toxicity of some species: what is toxic to the humans is not toxic for some animals (and opposite!). The Dead Cap (Amanita phalloides) is highly toxic (up to deadly) for us but for example squirrels (and many others!) enjoy them, same for many other toxic mushrooms that I know. And I'm giving an example with only the mammals (insects, slugs - they use to eat toxic mushrooms for breakfast!). They don't need us to spread their spores!
Some other properties (here for simplicity I will sample just what Oyster mushrooms can do...).
1. Ability to degrade the lignin from the lignocellulose is giving them food source - easily consuming the cellulose (and that is sugar! - yes, the paper that we use is form of sugar!).
2. Powerful enzymatic system that is able to break many other molecules - food source.
3. Did you know they have a micro-structures that can capture nematodes (tiny worms) and utilize them for a food?

And there are so many other features like an antibiotics production, symbiotic properties e.t.c. all of them correlated with the ability to survive and evolve.
Other features are just a byproduct of their metabolism - like the anti-cancer properties of some fungi that we can use but can't explain what advantage that fungi have from it.
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Flowers and other Flora

R5m2 + Laowa RF 58mm macro
Some hand held stacks of 42 frames:
View attachment 227269
49 frames:
View attachment 227270
and 28 frames:
View attachment 227271
I'm same as Click: the second one! With the frost they all look great!
Damn it - I can't find any thing frosted around :(! Didn't check in the fridge but we usually don't keep flowers there :oops: ...

DSC_7421.jpg
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Real world RF 28-70 2.8 IS results?

I have this lens. Better than the two RF 24-105/4L lenses I had previously in terms of resolution. I use the f/2.8 aperture more than I miss the 24mm (and I have the RF 24/1.8), and when cropped is sharper than the RF 24-105s at 105mm. Smaller and lighter (I love how it retracts). Main use is events, family portraits and hiking. Only real downside is that it goes soft at very close focus.
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BIRD IN FLIGHT ONLY -- share your BIF photos here

I looked for a kingfisher in a local park some days ago but got only a few shots just before sunset.
R5m2 + RF 200-800 @ 1/4000s, f/9, ISO 51200
View attachment 227259
Two days later I had more luck and saw him in the morning but only once flying by in a distance.
R5m2 200-800
@ 1/4000s, f/9, ISO 12 600/ 20 000
View attachment 227260View attachment 227261View attachment 227262View attachment 227263
Very nice shots! There are a couple of Belted Kingfishers in my area, but I just can't ever get close enough to them.
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