Canon 5D3 Date, Poll & Info

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Canon 5D mark III Announcement Date


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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

The way I see it is that a few years ago, DSLR brands were constantly putting out something new. We customers were okay with it, but that's mostly because there weren't many choices and you didn't really care that much.

Today, we are the ones who want new technologies, faster and better, while the companies want to "delay" this for as long as possible; they know their stuff is good and we know it is as well, so there's no point of them upgrading what still competes very well with today cameras.

My 2 cents. The D800 and 5D MK III are surely coming in 2012.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

KeithR said:
CanonFanNum1 said:
if Canon pushes resolution further, the IQ per pixel will decrease (along with increased noise).
Seriously - this is rubbish. It just doesn't happen like that.

Same argument why the 1DX isn't more megapixels, its better-pixels.
There's no such thing as "better" pixels.
You can have better pixels.

I think the thing you've forgotten (or don't understand) is that there are varying standards for ISO performance as far as the photographer's concerned:

a.) Per-frame (or per unit area) ISO performance - this is what you're talking about. For most people, this is most relevant.

b.) Per a fixed number of pixels (i.e. 4 pixels from one sensor compared with 4 from another). For some photographers with certain requirements, this may in fact be more relevant. If your target is bird photography (for example) and you typically shoot with your longest lens in challenging light (i.e. sunrise or sunset) and can't approach as close as you like, you both would like a high pixel density but also for the output to be as high quality as possible.

Alternatively (and I would agree with you that this following argument isn't a clear winner to me) some people argue that for less resolution-demanding applications - moderate sized prints or web presentation - they may get better performance out of a camera with larger pixels than the closest-specified one with smaller pixels (i.e. the 5D Mark II actually comes fairly close to the 7D in terms of per-pixel sharnpess for birding, after uprezzing the 8mp center area of the 5D roughly analogous to the 7D's full frame and of course there's no contest for full frame landscape shots if you want to preserve your wider perspective - that's before taking into account dynamic range and color saturation capacity, as well).

One of these standards isn't better than the other; they're different.

I've been banging the drum for submerging the importance given to the "lower pixel counts = lower IQ" meme for months. I criticized it when a Canon rep from Germany allegedly made comments about lower pixel counts being equivalent to higher quality, and I criticized it (although somewhat less enthusastically) when Chuck Westfall started falling into the same pattern. We have to realize that this is merely an argument about the best balance - not about a "best" strategy for all situations.

I am one of the first people to post reminders that you can't talk about the IQ of a "single pixel;" IQ comparisons only make sense when you have more than one pixel (and, realistically, far more than four) pixels to compare. But that wasn't the original intent of the poster you were replying to. It is an important concept, though, because it's one of the two extreme cases for pixel density that we can take up to show that the "pixel density vs. ISO performance" cliche actually is true, but only as a balanced result taking into account technology.

For fun, consider the extreme cases: If you have one monolithic, sensor-size pixel, clearly we can't say anything about its quality other than to say how effective it is at capturing light (it approaches 100% of photons hitting the sensor plane better than smaller pixels; typical camera sensor photosites lose quite a bit, especially older models without microlenses, and even the microlenses require the light to be coming in from a fairly precise direction, which is allegedly a problem with some lenses, wideangles being the prime example quoted). Start to break that sensor up into smaller pixels, and each of those pixels will still capture much more light (total) than any photosite on a camera sensor currently on the market - it still requires fewer tradeoffs in terms of noise reduction to be made, and the bar for rejecting a sensor due to faulty photosites is set higher (bad for the camera maker - good for the consumer). The other extreme is a sensor with a pixel count approaching infinity - each sensor site might capture only one photon, or none; at that point it is challenging at best to determine if a signal from any photosite is appropriate or wholly spurious. Readings could only be made by statistical analysis of all sensor sites.

In practice, larger photosites capture more light and so less aggressive gain needs to be applied to the signal read from them. They should be relatively more immune to breakage (as I mentioned earlier, there should be a higher threshhold for the number of bad photosites to require a sensor be rejected on a sensor with smaller, and hence more, photosites) and they should be more immune to bleeding of charge from one photosite to another. Smaller photosites, on the other hand, can overwhelm the problem of individually capturing fewer photosites by the fact that they still are statistically significant - and four pixels in place of one is a massive increase in translating the capture of light into information, so clearly the goal of sensor development is to maximize this trend. A good sensor design strives to find the balance of these two competing tendencies that best takes into account the current state of sensor technology.
KeithR said:
JR said:
Makes you wonder why would Nikon go all the way to 36MP doesn't it?
Because they know that the "more pixels = more noise" meme is nonsense?

Their ISO performance will likely take a hit
Where has this ever happened so far? I'll tell you: nowhere.

Every increase in pixel density so far has been accompanied by an improvement in noise (and, often DR) performance.
I'm not going to discount the tendency of the camera manufacturers to generalize the truth to something useless but presentably marketable.

However, you are dismissing the reality that every increase in pixel density in any case you wish to cite has also been accompanied by improvements in technology (and also that we are discussing the per-frame or per-area metrics of image quality, and dismissing the per-pixel count metrics).

In other words, the camera manufacturers have already, prior to releasing their cameras, already done the job of determining how many pixels to fit on their sensors, and they have had to factor in the practicality of producing sensors with the proposed pixel count on current processes (i.e. can it physically be made in quantity, at what baseline cost, and what will the reject rate be like) as well as making the determination about where to balance noise and pixel counts. There is also the matter of data transfer rates, and less relevantly storage capacities in commonly available media, which are the major factors holding back pixel sizes. So far, these pale in relevance to the other factors pushing forward pixel counts (although perhaps the argument that people want to speed up their workflow and get more use out of their hard drives has gained some traction recently).

Since they have done the job of determining the balance of ISO to pixel counts, it should therefore be no mystery that your observations can be correct despite the relative lack of dud cameras on the market.

I have made the case (just on my supposition) before that the relationship between noise and pixel counts is much more complicated than many people would admit - with noise probably rising more slowly than pixel counts. This wouldn't alter the overall outline of the case I've made that I can see.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I've been at a canon event , they told us that that 5dmkii will be on the products list for the all 2012 ( true or not ..i don't know )
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I'd say,

1. 30+ mpixel, 5fps, AF-system of 7D
2. march 2012... the 5DII sells way to good to announce it before...
3. 150 - 200% of what the 5DII cost... (they aim for 1Ds + 5DII-owners, don't they...?)
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

pulsiv said:
I'd say,

1. 30+ mpixel, 5fps, AF-system of 7D
2. march 2012... the 5DII sells way to good to announce it before...
3. 150 - 200% of what the 5DII cost... (they aim for 1Ds + 5DII-owners, don't they...?)

You said the 5D2 sells too well for the 5D3 to arrive before March '12. What makes you think that Canon won't wait till Photokina or late 2012? People may still be purchasing lots of 5D2's even then.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

Isaac said:
pulsiv said:
I'd say,

1. 30+ mpixel, 5fps, AF-system of 7D
2. march 2012... the 5DII sells way to good to announce it before...
3. 150 - 200% of what the 5DII cost... (they aim for 1Ds + 5DII-owners, don't they...?)

You said the 5D2 sells too well for the 5D3 to arrive before March '12. What makes you think that Canon won't wait till Photokina or late 2012? People may still be purchasing lots of 5D2's even then.

I think this will be highly dependant on when the Nikon D800 gets officially announced and launched. If this is early 2012, I dont think Canon will want to wait too long to respond. Then again if the D800 keeps getting delayed, then there is less pressure on Canon to bring it. I really Canon will wait for the D800 before doing anything...my two cents.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I think, they will (or at least should) rely on the 5DII's life cycle, rather than the announcement of the D800...
If the cash cow still sells... why bother announcing a new one? :)
from a business-point of view, it would make sense... so I'd say march 2012 or later...
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

pulsiv said:
I think, they will (or at least should) rely on the 5DII's life cycle, rather than the announcement of the D800...
If the cash cow still sells... why bother announcing a new one? :)
from a business-point of view, it would make sense... so I'd say march 2012 or later...

+1
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

Thats true however the D800 is going to play a big role in Canon's decision.

Why would Canon watch the D800 get released, totally dominate over the 5D2, Nikon steal part of the market and then 6-9 months later wake up and release the 5D3?

I think logic would say Canon have chosen their specs of the 5D3 and are waiting to announce it at any given moment.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Information & Poll (your thoughts)

Tarrum said:
I don't think there will be any announcements before March. Perhaps 5D Mark III from March - June, then the 7D with 650D at Photokina. Or in that order.

24 -30 megapixels, 5fps, max ISO 102,400.

+1 hoping for an MP count below the 30 mark, 24-28 MP,
hoping for March, though I consider that as quite unlikely.
I voted Photokina.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I don't know why everyone thinks Photokina? September is a very long time away (10 months) with a release date of about 2 months would make it a year a way from now.

I don't think this is likely.

So much can happen in 12 months, keeping in mind product life cycle plus nikon d800 - I think March is much more realistic. Please remember, Canon have NOT forgotten about us :P
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

lol said:
How soon do people want a 5D3? I'm asking as the 5D2 is at an all time low price that's more tempting to me than ever. If I get the 5D2 now, expect a 5D3 announcement soon. If I don't, there may be a long wait ahead...

So go and get your Mark II, finally want to know what to expect of a 5D3 specswise. 8)
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I was recently told by a Canon employee (I will not mention their seniority, affiliation, etc., as to protect their identity) that he has seen "hints of a new EOS body" being unveiled at "the 2012 CES show". CES 2012 is scheduled for January 10-13.

The employee I spoke with admitted that he was not privy to product launch information, or "in development" EOS bodies, and that specific launch date details are heavily guarded company secrets. However, he did mention that Canon had plans for a "larger than normal" CES booth/presence this year, with arrangements being made for high level employees and product reps. to be on hand.

It's definitely a "read between the lines" kind of scenario - but interesting none the less.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

I don't think the 5D3 will be announced before March. The event scheduled in January may have some good announcements but nothing as big as the 5D series.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

Isaac said:
I don't think the 5D3 will be announced before March. The event scheduled in January may have some good announcements but nothing as big as the 5D series.

I agree, from previous post I hope January brings a few more lens announcements. CR had mentionned maybe a new 24-70L and maybe a new 35L...but likely no new EOS bodies...
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

Let's see what happens with

1. the January event that Canon is going to be present at
2. the Nikon D800 announcement

I think the consensus is that March is more realistic that Photokina. Taking into account the D800 as well as the late product time frame cycle - it's harder to justify an announcement as late as Photokina.
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

Maybe Canon should hold off bringing a new camera to the market, until they have fixed there woeful autofocus problem (or at least until they admit to a problem (7D)).
 
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Re: Canon 5D3 Announcement Date & Poll (and your thoughts)

There have been enough people to complain about the 5D2 AF system. I'm positive that Canon will give the 5D3 a much improved AF, from what pro's have told me - it certainly will not be similar/same to the 5D2.
 
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