eeek said:Canon is smart. They are market driven. If they see a demand, they release it. I don't think they 'demand' you see is real.
Axilrod said:This isn't an either/or thing, Canon releasing the 60Da has nothing to do with a high megapixel body or their plans for such a camera. It's just a random astrophotography camera they released. They've probably seen the slew of time lapses that have come out in the last year and realized that it's getting more and more popular, so why not release a camera that's actually meant to work with telescopes? People have been using DSLRs with telescopes for a long time, I think it's cool they released one that's actually intended to be used this way.
I had no idea it was coming, but I will be buying one since I'm obsessed with the cosmos.
I think it took much less investment in time and money to just use a different IR filter plus some firmware tweaking to offer the 60Da. Designing a new, high megapixel body would be a much larger investment in time & money (but would sell to a larger market). I think this is similar to Nikon offering the D800 with and without anti-aliasing; requires a small change in the production line and some firmware modification (rather more, I suspect, than the 60Da did).bestimage said:Wondering if Canon sees a bigger market for 60Da vs high mega pixel camera, ...
poias said:Lets face it, high mpx is in demand, as proven by crazy demand for D800... its demand is almost solely due to its high mpx.
jrista said:poias said:Lets face it, high mpx is in demand, as proven by crazy demand for D800... its demand is almost solely due to its high mpx.
Where exactly to people get numbers for "demand"? I've searched the web up and down, and I have never once seen any useful, concrete information about exactly what the "demand" is for any Camera, D800, 5D III, 1DX or anything else. I don't think there are such numbers. Without "demand" volumes derived from some kind of careful study that properly tracks D800 and 5D III sales from a number of major retailers...not just one or two like Amazon or B&H (not items manufactured from the manufacturers, as they make and ship without any precise regard to how many might actually sell), no one can really say for sure what the global market demand for these cameras is. Until the companies release official sales numbers, I think its simply hearsay to proclaim the "demand" for the D800 is larger than the "demand" for anything else.
In the Nikon world the D800 is obviously the big baby, (and apparently for a relatively small group of hyperpixelpeepers in the Canon camp who think ISO 100 DR is the end-all be-all of everything in the continuum of photography.) However in the Canon world, which is arguably larger, the 5D III is going to be the big seller. On this forum alone there are dozens and dozens of 5D III owners already, and I can only imagine that in the broader Canon customer base there are far, far more 5D III's than anyone could know about with any concrete certainty.
Personally, I think proclamations of "demand" for any camera at this point is extremely premature, especially with the Olympics right around the corner. I would not be surprised to see D4 and 5D III sales surge the closer we get, especially if Canon doesn't release the 1D X until the day before the Olympics start. The D800, while it certainly has a lot of glitter and gloss with its shiny 36mp sensor...is rather slow from a frame rate perspective, consumes an ungodly amount of memory space, and is in general designed for an entirely different market than your average Olympics photographer. Time will tell, but I don't really see either camera radically outselling the other in the long run.
Easy: manually, using the normal telescope focusing mechanism. Just point towards a bright star, and use live view if you have it (very useful). Fortunately all celestial objects are located at the same focal distance: infinity. I'm sure you can google up lots of helpful web pages on the topic.well_dunno said:Would you know how focusing is carried out when the cam is mounted on a telescope?
poias said:Possible, but Canon may not have technology to provide a quality high mpx in a cost effective manner.
epsiloneri said:Easy: manually, using the normal telescope focusing mechanism. Just point towards a bright star, and use live view if you have it (very useful). Fortunately all celestial objects are located at the same focal distance: infinity. I'm sure you can google up lots of helpful web pages on the topic.well_dunno said:Would you know how focusing is carried out when the cam is mounted on a telescope?