Don Haines said:
PureClassA said:
3kramd5 said:
dilbert said:
I'm not saying that this was the case but white lens no longer just means Canon. You need to do more diligence than that now.
I'm not sure if random meaningless counts are *due* any diligence.
Sure it does. I'm quite confident that many of those lovely great whites were mounted to Sony's with metabones adapters... or none of them were... probabaly more the later. Those guys need pro bodies that are reliable and work.
[SARCASM]
Inconceivable! Inconceivable!
These are pros who are paid to get that split second timing shot of that tiny football flying through the air as it is caught by a fast moving person running erratically in a different direction and partially screened by the rest of the players. They don't care in the least about AF speed and accuracy, or the ability to track the target.... They don't care about burst rate.... They don't care about lens quality.... They don't care about a decent user interface that allows them to quickly change settings... They don't care about how easy it is to hand-hold for three hours..... and they certainly don't care about weather sealing because nobody ever pays football in anything other than perfect sunshine... They only care about two things.... is it mirrorless and how well does DXO rate it for shooting a stationary object in a dimly lit room.... because if there anything that screams superbowl at you, it's stationary objects in a dimly lit room...
[/SARCASM]
Sure, be sarcastic now while you can ...
but if shooting well in dimly lit rooms doesn't resemble the SuperBowl, ask the shooters what ISO they use. If it were like a dimly lit room then they would be using ISO >= 6400 to stop the action, right?
This is the conundrum that DxO presents: all of the scores for lenses are done in conditions where you would want to use high ISO - where Canon is supposedly "better" (or at least not any worse) yet Canon fanbois hates them.
I don't know about you but I'm looking forward to seeing how well the autofocus does on Sony's A6300.