Lawliet said:Famateur said:If Canon used Sony sensors, it reduces Sony's incentive to innovate. You'd have Sony, Canon and Nikon all using the same sensors. You want to talk about a company riding sensor technology for as along as it can? That's exactly what such a non-competitive scenario would encourage!
You're missing the other sensor manufactors in that equation - its not a Sony/Canon duopoly, there are quite a few other players in the game.
On the other hand just look what that self imposed lock in did with DPAF. What could be top of the line is hamstringend by legacy decisions while others deliver what DPAF should have brought.
There are other players, but not necessarily in the digital photography space. Toshiba is another, but for the most part, Sony has a very, very dominant position in the space for digital photography. Other brand sensors, such as Aptina and Omnivision, play mostly in the small form factor segments. Smartphones, video, embedded and machine vision, astrophotography. Sony plays there as well, but in the digital photography segment, particularly the higher end digital photography segment? Even the MFD players have moved to Sony. Nikon is slightly more diverse, with some Toshiba sensors. Panasonic has their own sensors, but a lot of their innovations also don't seem to be getting used in the digital photography segment. Samsung may be moving in, but they don't have much at the moment. That makes Canon and Sony the big players. Canon moving to Sony would remove the only other significant player in this particular market segment...I think that would be very bad, at least for a while. Maybe Samsung could fill in the gaps, but I think they would have a tough time competing against an 1800 pound gorilla.
Upvote
0