Tinky said:
neuroanatomist said:
archiea said:
My interpetation is that Canon dipped into the corporate parts bin
I think it is also them dipping a toe into the water. Whereas other MILC makers have a lineup of cameras, Canon has one. It seems likely they simply think the market isn't ripe for a major investment. I suspect they were quite encouraged that their first foray into the space – the original EOS M – was the #2 MILC body in the largest MILC geographical market.
"I suspect". Unwarranted assumption? and as fallacies go, you ignore the markets in which the camera was heavily discounted and where certain models and lenses were not marketed.
Not saying you are wrong, I respect your right to an opinion... sorry, unwarranted assumption.
Indeed, it was quite unwarranted for me to assume people would be capable of grasping the point of the argument without me spelling out every little detail and then connecting the dots for them. My bad.
The global MILC market is much smaller than the dSLR market. In the analogy, that means Canon knows the water is tepid. Some market signs point to MILCs growing, perhaps becoming dominant at some future time. In the analogy, Canon knows they have to go swimming in that pool. Canon is making a limited investment in the MILC space now, one body series and a handful of dedicated lenses. In the analogy, that's them dipping their toe in the water. They were encouraged because their initial foray into the market was very successful in the largest part of the global MILC market. The are continuing their limited investment, updating their one model and releasing additional lenses slowly and only in significant global market segments. In the analogy, the water isn't warm and inviting, so Canon didn't dive head-first into the deep end of the pool. But they can slowly wade into the shallow end, with confidence they'll swim effectively in the whole pool once the water warms up.
My, that was tedious – like explaining a concept to a 5-year old – but hopefully you understand the point now.