bholliman said:AvTvM said:Rather good Ff cameras can be had at decent prices (6D, D610, A7) .. And they can be really compact too (A7/R/S). Prices will fall further, functionality will further increase.
Fuji X systems and mFT cameras will not be sucessful in price bands of 1000+ for every camera and every other lens .. As soon as the hype is over and as soon as compact ff mirrorless cameras plus matching lenses can be had at decent prices, people wil buy those rather than half- and quartet-sized sensors.
+1 the Fuji APS-C and mFT systems are very nice, but can't survive much longer at their current price points. As AvTvM pointed out, there are good FF system alternatives in the same price range. APS-C's main advantages over FF are size and system price at the expense of some IQ. The APS-C size advantage is legitimate (even compact FF bodies will require large glass once you move beyond maybe 85mm)' but price advantage does not exist with $1,200 bodies and $1k lenses. Full frame
As camera phones improve these high end APS-C systems will eventually disappear.
Different photographers have different needs. Full frame is great, but it doesn't meet everyone's needs. For some, a small size is paramount, because they travel or because they have too much other stuff they need to carry. And for those who don't print large, the quality difference is minimal. Olympus offers a 75mm f/1.8 that is very small and image stabilized with any Olympus body. The closest full frame equivalents are 135mm f/2 (large) and 200mm f/2 (very large) lenses. In this respect, the Olympus 75/1.8 is unparalleled in any system because it's so small. APS-C and m4/3rds will survive because FF will never offer lenses that small, especially telephoto lenses like the 75/1.8. Some photographers really appreciate small gear.
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