HurtinMinorKey said:
Yah, but to create your new "consumer" refrigerator they don't take a $50,000 model and cripple it. I think the fact that the 5D3 video was such obvious nerf-ware is what really stuck in people's craw.
I understand the desire for product differentiation, but I think Canon misjudged the market reaction. Not to mention they increased the price of the 5D3 and only made modest improvements over a 4 year old camera. Think about how far computers have come during that time: My $2000 laptop will smoke a power PC from 4 years ago.
I'm not bitter, I swear. 8)
I don't know that it was crippled, it may not have been as good as people wanted, but whether or not that was deliberate or not is debatable. It is a stills camera after all that happens to shoot pretty good video. The stills side had huge improvements and the video had improvements too (although not as many). Why add a ton of video improvements when the majority of users are buying it for it's still capabilities? The 5D2 was an accident, it only seems logical to try to create separate products for each user base (still/video).
Even if the 5D3 had whatever you felt was lacking I doubt it would have stopped anyone from buying a C300. If it were $5000 I could understand, but there is a pretty massive price difference between the two. It just seems that if Canon did cripple the 5D3 it wasn't because they were worried about the C300.
And with people getting it for $2500-$3000 regularly I don't think the 5D3 is considered "overpriced" anymore.