Ebrahim Saadawi said:
It's very strange to me this is not exciting people. This is the highest-speced camera in the market and the highest-end crop body ever made.
If you don't already own a DSLR, particularly a crop-sensor, this is a pretty nice camera. But speaking as a 7D owner, I'm a bit underwhelmed after 5 years. 5 Years is a long time for what is basically a piece of consumer electronics. With most other products, we would expect a pretty big leap in this time (long enough that some products have almost come and gone, e.g. BluRay players). For most purposes, my 7D is fine, particularly when I can de-focus/re-focus a few times to give the AF a few tries to get it right (or use live-view). But as someone who shoots a lot in ISO-challenged circumstances (sports at night, evening weddings with existing light), along with better AF, I was hoping for another stop or more of usable ISO. Without that, they could have brought out this model 2.5 years ago with the 5D3 AF. Now I wonder if I should just buy the 2.5 year-old 5D3 (1DX isn't practical, particularly when you include the cost of the divorce).
I think this slow pace of innovation reflects the capture effect of a lens collection. Once you have a sizable lens collection, it's not really feasible to sell everything and re-buy another brand with it's own set of shortcomings. (I'd be interested in hearing from people who have done this and what the total $ cost was to switch.) So we just take what Canon gives us, letting them make us their bitch :-\.
Granted, for the vast majority of uses and users (most of whom are still shooting in P), the current technology is pretty great and beyond what most people take advantage of. It is only a tiny minority of us that are whining. In fact, if you believe Reichmann over at LuLa (http://www.luminous-landscape.com/essays/cameras/the_mirrorless_revolution.shtml), in 5 years, the masses will have switched to mirrorless, small-sensor cameras, and we will be left behind like MF, paying more and more for glacial innovation. Well, "in the long run, we are all dead." In the meantime, I guess I'll just make some more pictures and focus on the majority of situations where it's not my camera that's holding me back. (Still thinking about that 5D3, though...)