neuroanatomist said:I love how people state assumptions as facts. I have this old cheat sheet of phrase translations for scientific writing; a couple of those phrases apply here:
- "It's well undersood..." = "I think..."
- "It's widely believed..." = "A couple other people think so, too..." (It's an old sheet - today, "I read it on the Internet..." is probably more apt.)
JR said:parsek said:A mere 22MP output would be incredibly disappointing for me, despite how great the rest of it will turn out. It would make me drop my plans of upgrading to the 5D Mark III entirely. Unless of course it has 18+ f-stops of dynamic range.
I see this a bit differently. Having a 22MP sensor is probably the best chance we have to see some tangible ISO improvement in the 5D mkIII with a new processor, as opposed to getting a super high MP sensor like 36MP and having ISO performance remains the same or even beeing less then today.
Of course all this are compromise, but we have to assume Canon will pick the compromise that suit the most people so as to generate the most sales...
Jacques
neuroanatomist said:On a side note, if you look at those numbers - more than a 100% increase in dSLR share of camera sales and revenue over the past 5 years - and also consider the overall dSLR market share, which went from a near tie to Canon dominating, it's easy to see how Canon could (and arguably should) feel that they have had a winning strategy for the past several years, and thus easy to see how they can justify sticking to that same strategy. I'm not saying they should do that, but that's definitely the easy road, especially for a conservative company.
Well, I think it's too early to get any info of 1ds iv,at most you will hear some rumors from other sources, but they won't be solid!sjprg said:As a landscape photographer. if Canon dosen't get off their arrogant position and give us some info on the
1DS-IV, I for one am off to the Nikon D800 (36MP). I'll keep my 1DS-III as a backup. I don't need another PJ camera, but I would like a 40MP+ camera.
Because there are no such drawings. Products are designed on 3D CAD. You either send out the complete 3D CAD assembly model, and only a complete idiot would do that, or you send out a prototype 5DIII. There are many 5DIII out there right now, in different configurations, for test and evaluation.neuroanatomist said:Can someone explain why Canon would provide any information to a waterproof housing manufacturer in advance of the release of a new camera, other than detailed engineering drawings and specifications for the external dimensions and button placements on that camera?
Bengt Nyman said:Because there are no such drawings. Products are designed on 3D CAD. You either send out the complete 3D CAD assembly model, and only a complete idiot would do that, or you send out a prototype 5DIII. There are many 5DIII out there right now, in different configurations, for test and evaluation.neuroanatomist said:Can someone explain why Canon would provide any information to a waterproof housing manufacturer in advance of the release of a new camera, other than detailed engineering drawings and specifications for the external dimensions and button placements on that camera?
It is painful for us still photographers to learn that we hardly count any more. 90% of the efforts going on at Canon to develop the 5DIII has to do with pimping the 5D to become a sexier, cheap 5D video camera. I don't want no cheap video camera, less than half of which is designed to do high IQ still photography. Unfortunately Canon is doing the same with the 1DX. Yes, and Nikon is doing the same. Leica is no solution with the industries worst dynamic range and heavy handed, exaggerated contrast and saturation. I am beginning to think that if the camera has built in video, don't even consider it. Why? Because half the money you pay for the camera goes to subsidize the guy who buys if for video. I want the very best still camera. You want video? That's your problem.V8Beast said:All Canon has to do with the 5DIII is slightly improve the DR and ISO, while substantially improving the AF, and it will have a winner on its hands.
Of course the underwater people would rather have the 3D CAD data as well as a prototype. Canon would be fools to give CAD data outside a need to know basis. That's why they got a camera, and still abused the nondisclosure agreement.neuroanatomist said:Bengt Nyman said:Because there are no such drawings. Products are designed on 3D CAD. You either send out the complete 3D CAD assembly model, and only a complete idiot would do that, or you send out a prototype 5DIII. There are many 5DIII out there right now, in different configurations, for test and evaluation.neuroanatomist said:Can someone explain why Canon would provide any information to a waterproof housing manufacturer in advance of the release of a new camera, other than detailed engineering drawings and specifications for the external dimensions and button placements on that camera?
Makes sense.
Bengt Nyman said:It is painful for us still photographers to learn that we hardly count any more. 90% of the efforts going on at Canon to develop the 5DIII has to do with pimping the 5D to become a sexier, cheap 5D video camera. I don't want no cheap video camera, less than half of which is designed to do high IQ still photography. Unfortunately Canon is doing the same with the 1DX. Yes, and Nikon is doing the same. Leica is no solution with the industries worst dynamic range and heavy handed, exaggerated contrast and saturation. I am beginning to think that if the camera has built in video, don't even consider it. Why? Because half the money you pay for the camera goes to subsidize the guy who buys if for video. I want the very best still camera. You want video? That's your problem.V8Beast said:All Canon has to do with the 5DIII is slightly improve the DR and ISO, while substantially improving the AF, and it will have a winner on its hands.
neuroanatomist said:Orangutan said:It's well-understood (or at least widely reported) that P&S sales account for vastly more sales and profits than DSLR's, even with much lower profit margin
I love how people state assumptions as facts. I have this old cheat sheet of phrase translations for scientific writing; a couple of those phrases apply here:
neuroanatomist said:Orangutan said:It's well-understood (or at least widely reported) that P&S sales account for vastly more sales and profits than DSLR's, even with much lower profit margin
I love how people state assumptions as facts. I have this old cheat sheet of phrase translations for scientific writing; a couple of those phrases apply here:
- "It's well undersood..." = "I think..."
- "It's widely believed..." = "A couple other people think so, too..." (It's an old sheet - today, "I read it on the Internet..." is probably more apt.)
So, P&S sales account for more profit than dSLR sales? Do you have evidence to support this claim? I'm going to guess no...and I'm saying that because Canon has presented that the true situation is the opposite of what you state - and getting more opposite by the quarter. The screenshot below is a slide from Canon's 3Q11 financial presentation (that's the most recent one posted, you can find them all here), and I've highlighted the relevant part with a red oval.
According to Canon, in 3Q11, dSLR sales accounted for 29% of units sold, but 72% of revenue from camera sales. If you look back historically (presentation materials at the link above), you can see that over the past several years, both the dSLR percentage of units sold and the percentage of camera revenue from dSLR sales has increased substantially (for example, 5 years previous to to 3Q11, dSLRs accounted for 12% of units and 34% of revenue).
On a side note, if you look at those numbers - more than a 100% increase in dSLR share of camera sales and revenue over the past 5 years - and also consider the overall dSLR market share, which went from a near tie to Canon dominating, it's easy to see how Canon could (and arguably should) feel that they have had a winning strategy for the past several years, and thus easy to see how they can justify sticking to that same strategy. I'm not saying they should do that, but that's definitely the easy road, especially for a conservative company.
neuroanatomist said:That's a confound - the limitation probably isn't the Digic processor(s), it's the mirror. Even on the 1D X, the Digic5+'s aren't the whole story, else why is 12 fps the max for RAW and 14 fps is only JPG? That speaks to a buffer/card speed limitation.
Regardless, I doubt we'll see two Digic processors in a 5-series camera, and I really doubt we'll see 7.5 fps. But...I'd like to be proven wrong!
traveller said:I've tried to do all the calculations based upon previous Digic generations, but I've found that it's very difficult to come up with precise figures for processing power. Take the Digic 4 generation:
1D Mk4 = 16MP x 10fps = 160/2 = 80MP/s
7D = 18MP x 8fps = 144/2 = 72MP/s
60D = 18MP x 5fps = 90MP/s
So there's a range from 72 - 90MP/s that they Digic 4 seems to be capable of processing; so are the 1D X's Digic 5+s at the higher end or lower end of their capability range? There is also the complicating factor that the 1D X has a separate Digic 4 processor dedicated to AF and metering. It could be entirely possible that a camera using dual Digic 5 for both image processing and AF & metering, might only be capable of 7.5fps. Alternatively, this could be all that marketing would allow for a sub-1D series full frame camera. Of course, it is far more likely that this rumour is total BS!
LetTheRightLensIn said:People trying to sort out major hints given on one forum where one member has seen and held the new camera, one possible guess for specs is apparently:
roughly 30MP, 6fps, AF better than 7D and worse than 1DX, video without moire
If so, those would be some nice specs (assuming everything works) and, on paper at least, make the D800 seem worse.
thepancakeman said:LetTheRightLensIn said:People trying to sort out major hints given on one forum where one member has seen and held the new camera, one possible guess for specs is apparently:
roughly 30MP, 6fps, AF better than 7D and worse than 1DX, video without moire
If so, those would be some nice specs (assuming everything works) and, on paper at least, make the D800 seem worse.
Now that is a camera I'd buy! (It's only $899, right? :)
LetTheRightLensIn said:thepancakeman said:LetTheRightLensIn said:People trying to sort out major hints given on one forum where one member has seen and held the new camera, one possible guess for specs is apparently:
roughly 30MP, 6fps, AF better than 7D and worse than 1DX, video without moire
If so, those would be some nice specs (assuming everything works) and, on paper at least, make the D800 seem worse.
Now that is a camera I'd buy! (It's only $899, right? :)
More like $699 max.
OK let us say $2700-$3700. (less than the 1DX because a 6fps FF shutter/mirror cost a lot less to make than 12fps version and sports guys want 8fps min these days and this won't hit the magic number and it won't have the same weather sealing, 100% VF, voice notes, etc.)
Although, someone pointed out that the hint giver also said that some might still prefer 1Ds3 over the new body, not just 1D2,1D3,1DX so it can't just be about the speed then since the 1Ds3 is slow and since the specs above sure seem way better to me than the 1Ds3, sadly, maybe they are just a dream (at least in Canon land).
Maybe it is 18MP, 3.9fps and crippled 7D AF heh.