Show your Bird Portraits
- By ISv
- Animal Kingdom
- 32690 Replies
The Robin is very nice photo but the Blue tit is killer!
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The Robin is very nice photo but the Blue tit is killer!
Canon/Nikon/Sony probably have more granular market segments (especially by region) but for me, there are 3 buyer categories:Agreed that were all making assumptions. From what I have seen from most reports are that Professional is the largest end user( by revenue), followed by Prosumer and then hobbyist. Content Creator/Prosumer may or may not be grouped together depending on where you look. As mentioned Content Creator is the fastest growing group based on revenue.
They latched onto something to downgrade Canon for daring to be first with 8k30 raw and still the only OEM to have a hybrid that does this. If cinema light codecs or external recording (USB-C or Ninja) or had the subsequent firmware updates (timer to measuring temperature to allowing higher internal temps before shutdown) at the beginning then it would have been a different story.Punishment from that crowd didn't quell sales of the R5, so probably not too much of a worry for Canon. First is still first.
Punishment from that crowd didn't quell sales of the R5, so probably not too much of a worry for Canon. First is still first.The reviewers would certainly punish any Canon attempt for 12k unless it can continuously record for 2 hours without overheating![]()
Like, an R30?I can think of one other approach to the R3 II, but I'm almost certain that Canon would not do it - a pro-level crop body. A stacked or semi-stacked low-noise 32 mpx APS-C sensor on a fast body with a huge battery, built for birding, wildlife, and such for those with a bit of a budget constraint. Who can afford a 600 f/4 and a couple of teleconverters? How about a 400 f/4 instead with a couple of teleconverters. Or the fabled 200-600 f/5.6....
There would be a market for such a camera, although it may be somewhat small. A crop R3 with a couple or 3 fast zooms like a 15-55 f/2.8 or 15-85 f/4 L quality available.
That's what Sony does, if the range start at 70 make it up to 180mm. If it's start wider you can stop at 135 or 150mm.I doubt there will be one of those. There might be (I hope) a 70-135 or 70-150 f/2.
I don't see overlapping two f/2 L zooms.
I doubt there will be one of those. There might be (I hope) a 70-135 or 70-150 f/2.I'm waiting for the 50-150mm f/2 for RF. Also I don't think they'll do a 300 f/2.8 just because they already have the 100-300 f/2.8, unless i suppose they want to do what sony did and have a very light 300 prime.
Nikon surprised the market with their Z8/Z9 pairing which they thought would have been successful but only they know the volume of each. If they release their next iteration with the same option then we know there is sufficient volume for Nikon to offer it.Battery grips used to cost $200-250, they now cost over $400. Even accounting for inflation and the recent tariffs, that's a disproportionate price increase. A likely reason for that is that they are selling fewer units and need to increase the cost to achieve ROI. Canon stopped making battery grips for many lines, even the top APS-C R7 didn't come with that option...presumably because Canon didn't think they'd sell enough at an acceptable price to justify the development costs. No ROI = don't make it. So it seems that accessory grips are becoming less popular, not more. Probably doesn't add to the arguments in favor of a high-MP body with an integrated grip.
My first SLR was an AE-1. Bought it with the 50 1.4 which at the time was not a bad lens. However, after getting a 35-70 it hardly ever got used. So the two lenses mentioned are very likely candidates, though I was surprised that the RF45 was introduced rather than a 50. Suppose Canon want 50 to appear pro? Still have those bits of kit.Why is that? Canon sells more single memory card cameras than it does with two and it sells relatively few large battery pack cameras.
Why is everyone saying 45mm is a retro lens? Was it released with the AE-1?
The people who took the company to the leadership position in the ILC market 22 years ago, kept it there since then, and made the ongoing decisions that resulted market dominance with nearly half of the cameras sold every year having the Canon nameplate on them. So...I'm guessing people who know more about what features should go into cameras at various levels and for various target market segments, including the R1, than anyone posting on this forum.Who’s running things at canon??? Not a good business decision in my opinion.
He has a better hairstyle than I. Maybe a Kodak FunSaver is a better fit for me.Offered for your consideration, the Leica Q2 "Ghost".
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I think the problem with those analysis is that there are no well-defined boundaries to separate hobbyists from prosumers from content creators. So it is difficult to establish what category goes up or down.Agreed that were all making assumptions. From what I have seen from most reports are that Professional is the largest end user( by revenue), followed by Prosumer and then hobbyist. Content Creator/Prosumer may or may not be grouped together depending on where you look. As mentioned Content Creator is the fastest growing group based on revenue.
AgreedI don't disagree that the hobbyist market is going upmarket as well. That was a core part of my argument. My macro view was that the bottom of the market is being eroded to smartphones and the Chinese and the Japanese camera makers are shifting toward more premium products rather than trying to compete head to head on price. For example Full frame is gaining ground. So if smartphones and the Chinese are making more and more small sensor cameras the Japanese are making more larger sensors.
Well a lot of "gearheads" upgrade regardlessA hobbyist will be less likely to upgrade without a real meanigful upgrade. And we are hitting a point to where for the casual shooter they may never need to upgrade. I argued for example 8K tv's are declining in sales. So if we never surpass 4K displays as mainstream why would we need 12k consumer cameras for example?
While I do not shoot day in and day out, the main reason I am looking at a X2D II is that my H5X is about to give up the ghost. The X2D II also has a CMOS sensor and ok AF, which make me overlook the painful (to me) fact that I will be downgrading sensor size (from 54x40mm to 44x33mmContrast that with the prosumer/professional where they are beating the crap out their equipment and can benefit from minimal new feautures as they are getting paid for the content they produce. As a result they are going to cylcle through equipment at a faster rate through either upgrade or replacing worn out items.
Well color me uninterestedNow of course the future always throws something crazy at you. I wouldn't be surprised if they figure out how to put AI and some other software in the camera and then tie it to a subscription.
Thanks for that. I wasn't aware that CAGR has a fixed denominator, such that different segments must sum to 100% and if one segment grows then another must shrink. I also wasn't aware that predicted future growth (I think growth is the G in CAGR, right?) and current revenue share are the same type of information, such that they can be readily compared and/or added together.So Content creators grew, Professonals retained and therefore the hobbyist is probably what decreased a bit. This is as a precent of revenue and since revenue increased its possible that each group made more money its just the mix that is shifting.By end user, content creators registered the fastest growth trajectory with a 6.8% CAGR through 2030, whereas professional photographers retained 35.6% revenue share in 2024.
As I know pros that had to downsize since they cannot afford expensive gear anymore...I disagree that pros need to justify their investment.
They, of course, need to make more money than they spend, but I know plenty of pros who pay for things they like more than I need.
Yet again, I present the same argument as before: When having the same lens bionet, the "M" is just a name, call it R100 or R50 and you have the same "M" concept, having no EVF, allowing it to mount RFs lenses to the same 2/3 sized sensors. So why keep the "M" with separate line of lenses? It is much more economical to have one line of lenses (bionet) than keep two lines, the developmet of two lines of lenses is not the right commercial way, cause you spend double the reseouces, while the difference between the M5 and the R100 is negligible.Big bulky EF lenses never felt right on myR5(correction: M5). I bought them to work on a 5D, 40D, 5D3 and 7D. They feel right at home on an R7 and R6-2. Canon could have kept the M series and also introduced the RF series. But they didn't. Why? The EF SL1, SL2 and SL3 were also tiny, slightly larger than the M5, and they were popular. Maybe Canon decided that having a large lens mount on a small body was acceptable.
In history, Canon used the "3" for thier exerimental camera where new features were brought up in a "lesser than flagship" camera. In the R3 they brought what was once used on the "3" the eye controlled focus as the "new exciting feature". I think that they can "bring up" in the 3M2 smoethign like the stack sensor into reality, before implementing it into the "1" or "5"The original Canon EOS R3 was a “stop-gap” for lack of a better term until Canon could develop what they considered a true 1 series flagship. The EOS R3 certainly resembled Canon's gripped DSLRs like the EOS-1D Mark III, that was and is extremely popular among professionals in various disciplines. The EOS R3 has a […]
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