That rumored date for the R5 annoncement is pretty near! Only 11 days way!
Sure, so the rumour says. But it also says shipping in July. And it is the second part that is regarded the most trustworthy by CR...
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That rumored date for the R5 annoncement is pretty near! Only 11 days way!
I think that’s what he is saying. Especially if you can pull frame grabs. It will turn you all into pro photographers.So you're saying most people will shoot in 8k and not 4k....
Well, it would let us choose between an immense number of amateur frames.I think that’s what he is saying. Especially if you can pull frame grabs. It will turn you all into pro photographers.
I haven’t REALLY paid attention to the R5 and R6 yet. But, I read that the R6 might be a successor of the 6d? Is that the case when it might have 12/20 fps? Seems weird ...
The answer could be that this 24MP sensor has been produced using the same material, production process and basic design as the 90D sensor. Consequently, due to the 24MP's larger pixels, this should result in noticably lower noise compared to the 90D sensor!
It seems Canon abandoned the high MP camera promised for 2020. This might be a a market focused decision: Canon expects to sell more R5s than R5S'.
Unless it's 8K is like the EOS-R 4K. Upconverted from a crop that is much lower than 4K. Canon has no issues with lying.
With the R6 coming in June and the R5 coming in July, after a February announcement of the R5, people may tend toput off buying a camera until the summer. Maybe Canon figures that most people will need time to talk themselves into buying one of these cameras. It does not look like either one is going to be cheap. Or maybe Canon just lost control of the information release on the R5 and moved the R5 announcement forward to try to get back in control.These are some of the more odd ball rumors in awhile, the dates the specs. But as others have said Canon is in a new more aggressive mode so the old ways are not the new ways we will know more soon!
I don't think that Canon ever promised a high MP camera for 2020. Some people thought there would be a high res FF camera after the release of the 90D and the M6II with their 32 mp aps-c sensors, but that was internet speculation. I don't know of any Canon promise. You are likely right that Canon expects to sell more R5s than high res cameras, but my guess is that Canon's plan for quite a while has been to release the R5 before the high res camera.It seems Canon abandoned the high MP camera promised for 2020. This might be a a market focused decision: Canon expects to sell more R5s than R5S'.
Fervent anticipation is a great marketing tool.With the R6 coming in June and the R5 coming in July, after a February announcement of the R5, people may tend toput off buying a camera until the summer. Maybe Canon figures that most people will need time to talk themselves into buying one of these cameras. It does not look like either one is going to be cheap. Or maybe Canon just lost control of the information release on the R5 and moved the R5 announcement forward to try to get back in control.
People don't understand frame grabs. You still have to shoot at a shutter speed appropriate for stopping action, which is not the same shutter speed as you would use for video. Shooting at 1/60 sec (normal video) or even at 1/250 sec (for slo-mo) is only going to get you thousands of blurred images. You can shoot at 1/1000 second, but then the video will look like crap. The key to smooth video is to blur the action from one frame to the next, hardly conducive to frame grabs.I think that’s what he is saying. Especially if you can pull frame grabs. It will turn you all into pro photographers.
I wonder if Canon decided to make a development announcement for the R5, in order to head off the complaints about a 20mp sensor when they announce the R6.Yes. That´s the only explanation for the R5 dates. However there is one small (but big) difference. In the development announcement of Canon 1dxIII we didn´t have so much info! From these R5 it seems that we have practically all the info (at least the biggest and relevant....). So its kinda weird. We need to wait a bit longer to know.
I'm guessing that those wanting frame grabs are doing "fast stills" not actual video as such. Never the less, fast shutter video doesn't look quite as bad as your statement implies.People don't understand frame grabs. You still have to shoot at a shutter speed appropriate for stopping action, which is not the same shutter speed as you would use for video. Shooting at 1/60 sec (normal video) or even at 1/250 sec (for slo-mo) is only going to get you thousands of blurred images. You can shoot at 1/1000 second, but then the video will look like crap. The key to smooth video is to blur the action from one frame to the next, hardly conducive to frame grabs.
Unless it's 8K is like the EOS-R 4K. Upconverted from a crop that is much lower than 4K. Canon has no issues with lying.
I'm far from an expert but one great advantage is you can pan and zoom in post and still end up with HD.Could someone who does video explain why a user would want 8K video.
What would they use it for and who would view it at 8K?
Since I can barely visually detect the improvement of 4K over HD, is it easy to see the difference between 4K and 8K?
Seeing as most video seems to be consumed on phones would you notice 8k over HD on a phone?
Does anyone commercially ask for 8K over 4K or HD? Is it common?
I'm surprised its such a big selling point, is it something that users desire but won't really use?
If Canon was worried that it would impact sales of their existing product line while people wait for the new cameras, then I agree. But it's possible that they are counting on it impacting sales of their competitors' product lines while people wait. It can stop a loss of market share during the interim period.I’m having a hard time believing the announcement and release dates. Announcing one camera in February but releasing it in July and then announcing a second camera in May and releasing it in June doesn’t make sense.