Thanks. Could you please translate further as not many of us can read Mandarin.See the paper. After more than 3 years no new developed EF lenses launch, there maybe no Canon EOS 5D Mark V.
View attachment 201823
Although Hanzi characters is used in Japan, this is not in Chinese - it's in Japanese (notice the round/circular characters, which are not used in Chinese hanzi).Thanks. Could you please translate further as not many of us can read Mandarin.
The last bit I am unfortunately not able to translate, as some characters are missing in the lower right corner.Canon flagship Machine unifiedn
Chairman Mitaria to end Digital SLR
Canon's Chairman and CEO Fujio Mitarai responded to an interview with the Yomiuri Shimbun. The Canon SLR flagship Dell, which was revealed to be "to do", is known as the "EOS | 1" series, the first of which appeared in 1989. The latest model "EOS 1Dx Mark II" released in 2020 will be virtually the last model. Mr. Mitarai said, "The market needs are accelerating to mirrorless. In line with that,
we are moving more and more people", he said, revealing that he is reviewing the development system. Mirrorless has the feature that the shutter operation is electronically processed and there is almost no sutter sound. About the model for professional photographers, Mr Mitari.
Title write: "CEO Mitarai: DSLR era is over"Thanks @kaihp
In the last year I’ve done a 180 on mirrorless vs DSLR. A year ago I was using a 1Dx III and felt there would always be a demand for DSLRs.
I sold that 1Dx last week along with virtually all my EF lenses and am completely bought into the R system today. If others are moving in that direction I can believe there will be few if any new DSLRs in the future.
Thanks for the tip!Although Hanzi characters is used in Japan, this is not in Chinese - it's in Japanese (notice the round/circular characters, which are not used in Chinese hanzi).
The quickest way to translate it is to point your Google Translate app towards the image, choose "camera" and let it auto-detect and auto-translate.
Including Google-Translate'isms:
The last bit I am unfortunately not able to translate, as some characters are missing in the lower right corner.
Indeed. Japanese is in fact written in three distinct writing systems at once; they can (and will) be mixed together even in one sentence. Hanzi is one of them (borrowed Chinese; the Japanese call it 'kanji'), there are also hiragana and katakana. (Hiragana tends to be curvier; the two are collectively known as 'kana'.)Although Hanzi characters is used in Japan, this is not in Chinese - it's in Japanese (notice the round/circular characters, which are not used in Chinese hanzi).
English does its best to confuse foreigners, like pronouncing: A rough-coated, dough-faced, thoughtful ploughman strode through the streets of Scarborough; after falling into a slough, he coughed and hiccoughed.Indeed. Japanese is in fact written in three distinct writing systems at once; they can (and will) be mixed together even in one sentence. Hanzi is one of them (borrowed Chinese; the Japanese call it 'kanji'), there are also hiragana and katakana. (Hiragana tends to be curvier; the two are collectively known as 'kana'.)
They call the alphabet I am writing this in Romaji and of course they will use it on occasion, especially when using a computer that doesn't support either kanji or kana
Switching between three distinct systems (not including Romaji) makes Japanese probably the most difficult major language to read--there are serious mental gymnastics going on the the skull of the reader.
‘Ave you been on the Christmas cheer Alan ?English does its best to confuse foreigners, like pronouncing: A rough-coated, dough-faced, thoughtful ploughman strode through the streets of Scarborough; after falling into a slough, he coughed and hiccoughed.
It has hardly stopped raining. At least in the good old days with a DSLR I could have nipped out between cloudbursts and AFMA'd a telephoto lens. I can't do that with my R5 and R6.H
‘Ave you been on the Christmas cheer Alan ?
I think this is absolutely the final nail for FF DSLRs, but still a question whether any more APSCs will come.Thanks @kaihp
In the last year I’ve done a 180 on mirrorless vs DSLR. A year ago I was using a 1Dx III and felt there would always be a demand for DSLRs.
I sold that 1Dx last week along with virtually all my EF lenses and am completely bought into the R system today. If others are moving in that direction I can believe there will be few if any new DSLRs in the future.
And I heard once that written Tibetan is so behind the times the spelling is completely random.English does its best to confuse foreigners, like pronouncing: A rough-coated, dough-faced, thoughtful ploughman strode through the streets of Scarborough; after falling into a slough, he coughed and hiccoughed.
I think this is absolutely the final nail for FF DSLRs, but still a question whether any more APSCs will come.
Canon did produce several non professional SLRs after the EOS-1v in 2000. They released several cameras, including the 3000V/Rebel K2 in 2003 and the 300V/Rebel T2 and 30V/Elan 7 in 2004. So it's possible there are still some mid/low end cameras in the pipeline, depending on demand. We'll probably have to wait until COVID subsides and supply chains return to normal to see this happen. Or these events may hasten the decline of DSLRs so there isn't enough demand to produce mid/low end cameras.APSC DSLRs, if they continue, will likely be the Rebel type cameras, either three or four digit model numbers. If they don't....well, there's already the M series (which, contrary to the wet dreams of some here will not be killed); the question is whether anything would come out in RF.
Oh, believe me I was thinking of this. I often quote Homer, and I don't mean the Greek guy.