privatebydesign said:Anybody that believes "the best possible combination of digital available today" is a 135 format Nikon needs to get out more, there is a very reasonable digital medium format market that makes D810 files look like P&S's, but it costs ...
and it weighs. There's a decided tradeoff. Let me restate that. You'd have the best combination of hardware in both of the traditional DSLR form factors—that is, APS and APS-C.
privatebydesign said:there are very few people, some but very few, who would happily pay that kind of money for an incremental step in IQ that nobody could see at most reproduction sizes.
There are also very few people, percentage-wise, who pay the extra cost of L lenses, either, but the ability to step up to better lenses helps sales considerably.
vscd said:Haha. You forgot one important fact in your equation. Nikon is based on photography, only. Canon is a huge company where photography is just a minor part of the income. That's also a reason why they don't focus on everybodys body-wishes all the time. And to be honest, Nikon already gave up at the sensor-war. They couldn't compete.
Fair enough. Canon would still make some really nice color copiers and laser printers, and some inkjets that clog too easily.
scyrene said:I thought the Zeiss MF zealots claimed that AF was left off because it compromised image quality? I don't think you can just slot in AF motors/algorithms (or IS/VR for that matter) into an existing - supposedly near-perfect - MF design. Tech guys, right?
Compromise IQ? Almost certainly not. It would however, require a very different focusing system, so it would probably compromise manual focusing.
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