What a load of negativity here. Wow. I see people that:
- Say they never underexpose by 5 stops. Nope, most of us do not. It's a test scenario that let's you see how good your underexposed shadows can be.
- Say it's useless, because they use magic lantern already. Right. Has it ever occured to you it might be handy to not use magic lantern and do this straight from the camera in one go? You can even use magic lantern on top of that and get even more extreme results if you can't part with the software.
- "There are no scenarios where you would need this". Ok. So now all of the sudden we don't need more DR anymore. What about complex seascapes where you just can't use a grad? What about low-light event photography where you just don't want to use much flash (or can't)?
- "None of my current work includes a 5 stop boost for shadows". Great. Maybe it doesn't because you avoid it due to excessive noise in the shadows. Maybe better tools will open up new possibilities.
- "They make us pay 6000+ for this technology". Yeah, and over time it will probably be released in more affordable models as well. The top down approach is not uncommon to actually make money. It's what most healthy companies do by the way, make money.
You all act like it's some idiotic move of Canon to offer a real upgrade to their line-up. Or would you rather have seen a 1.2MP resolution bump, 2 extra cross-types, and a theoretical upgrade to the max ISO which takes the image from "very unusable" to "even more unusable"? We'd all be whining there is no reason to upgrade.
Complain because you cannot afford it or just don't want to spend that amount of money? The world has enough envious people without you already.
I can't see this anything less than very positive. It's a real upgrade, although we'll have to see if it's as good in the production model. Let's say it is, then it's a huge jump in the capabilities for Canon. Finally being able to have amount of DR while retaining detail is huge, and we can only hope to see it in other bodies soon as well. Would I buy one? Probably not because I'm not keen on spending that amount on a camera, but I am happy to see the technology progress and can't wait to see the work that people can produce with them.
And when the time comes Canon will put this tech in cheaper camera's I'll be first in line. You see, this is much better than having no progress at all on the DR/ISO front for Canon.