LonelyBoy said:AvTvM said:yes, totally agree. it is Canon and Nikon's undeserved good luck, that
• Sony f*cked up its choice of FF mirrorless lens mount.
• Fuji stupidly decided to go for 44X33mm "pseudo middle-format" (GFX) rather thn launching a kick-ass FF-sensored mirrorless product line
• Olympus and Panasonic settled for dwarf-sized mFT sensor format without being able to deliver proportionally smaller gear
• Ricoh/Pentax has no clue at all and f*cked up so badly with its long FDD K-mount mirrorless camera (K-01)
• Leica charges moon prices and made its SL system way too large and heavy
and it is CaNikon customers' bad luck, that
• all other makers fail to provide enough "competitive impetus" for CaNikon re. great mirrorless FF gear
sigh ...
Jumping back a couple of days, but I have to ask: what do you think is more likely?
1) Sony, Fuji, Olympus, Ricoh/Pentax, and Leica are all dumb and stupid and all whiff on design and engineering
2) The problem is more complex than you think and CaNikon looked at the realities and decided "nope nope nope nope nope can't do it properly we're not wasting money down that rat hole"
Be honest.
what i honestly think is stated in the post you are quoting.
fuji has NOT f*ckep up its lens mount paramrters and lens design. They chose an "APS-C optimized" lens mount and are sticking to APS-C, rather than raping the mount into FF sensor use ... as opposed to Sony.
Where Fuji fails (economically) is by trying to ONLY sell "retro-styled gear at premium prices". Yes, there is a market segment for it, but it is rather narrow ... people wanting a Leica, but not rich enough for that. In other words: maybe 5% market share. Fuji GFX ... technically solid 44x33 optimized lens mount parameters. Economically GFX will likely end in disaster, but not for "technical reasons".
Oly/Panasonic: lens mount parameters adequately chosen for mFT sensor diagonal. Economically: sensor is too small to offer significant, easily visible IQ advantages over smartphones. Even worse: mFT cameras / lenses size and prices are *not proportional to reduced sensor surface area* (which is technically not possible) .. not even close. And not many people in their right mind will pay 2,000 USD/€ for a quarter-sensor camera in 2017. Therefore: death within 3 years for Oly as we know it today. Panasonic will last somewhat longer, because of their product focus on video usage.
Basic ""product-technical" mistake: when Oly and consortium abandoned original FT mount - originally invented as a sensor-area-maximizing "work-around", back when FF sensors where way too expensive - they should have switched to 3:2, standard APS-C rather than re-inventing the wheel one more time with mFT. And speaking of "precious sensor surface": recording 16:9 video material on a 4:3 format sensor looks pretty crazy wasteful to me ... but hey, what do i know, i am just a dumb forum nut.
So in a nutshell, honestly
Reason: both EF-M and EF-mount are "technically feasible", BUT only with huge lens design compromises for a new system that Canon's future in imaging gear rides on. Canon has demonstrated in the past that they know, when it is time to "boldly break the old mold" ... and they will do it again! Because it is necessary in order to provide technically excellent gear at price points that yield maximum market share and profitability. "As small as possible AND fully capable" is a paramount factor for market success.
But, we shall see, which way Canon goes ... and how exactly they implement it ... and when.
Upvote
0