rishi_sanyal said:
I'm sorry we lost you as a reader.
But I do find fascinating that the one site that actually covered interesting findings like:
[list type=decimal]
[*]Dual Pixel AF is now available for the 1st time in a FF camera in Servo mode for stills
[*]Dual Pixel AF with face detection is now incredibly useful due to a simple tap of the joystick jumping between detected faces, which it'll track after you've selected
[*]Dual Pixel AF is inherently accurate because of on-sensor AF that is insensitive to optical path distance differences, and is insensitive to residual spherical aberration of lenses, no longer necessitating LUTs to deal with RSA as a function of subject distance and aperture
[*]Dual Pixel AF with 4K/30p effectively gives you a way of shooting 17:9 8.8MP JPEGs at 30 frames per second, with AF
[*]That the above is limited by rolling shutter (recent update)
[*]That Dual Pixel Raw gives you a couple of nose pores of refocusing range for a typical 85mm headshot (recent update)
[*]That if the 1D X II and 80D are indicative, we expect DR improvements that place the camera half-way to the best of the competition (not so unreasonable to extrapolate, is it, when the biggest improvement comes from going to on-sensor ADCs, with miniscule improvements from generation to generation, and considering that the last 'generation' was, like, a few months ago...)
[*]A suggested simple fix to Custom Controls that'd literally benefit most Canon shooters, and some examples of where the current system falls short - in an effort to, you know, suggest something that'd actually better the cameras to Canon
[/list]
That was all, well, 'not so useful' compared to what other sites provided?
Could you please tell us what it is that was useful that other sites provided? We're always looking to improve.
As for overall positivity, I respectfully disagree, being the person who wrote that a particular set of features on this camera 'might just change your life forever', and all the constant gushing on DPR re: the latest L-series lenses. But you're of course entitled to your own opinion.
I'd just question the immediate opinion of readers when we receive feedback like 'where in the review did you talk about F8 focus, or the a7 cameras overheating and poor menus'? Considering these were all written directly into the concluding pages of respective reviews, if not directly in pros/cons tables, I really do have to raise an eyebrow and ask: ?
-Rishi
Finally have a bit of time to respond....never said the review wasn't useful. Of course there is something of benefit. I know it would be easier to argue is I said something so drastic, but, didn't.
My point was and is that I considered what was written unduly negative. People can throw bias around, I did. And that may be correct. And yes, you like DPAF. I'll even acknowledge that you doubled down and stated that you "love" DPAF (6 of your 8 points above were about DPAF). But in reading this thread, I wonder if the issue is perspective.
Your perspective is that of a reviewer who handles a lot of different gear from different brands. Perhaps you think your job is to compare those different brands. If this assumption of mine is true, then this is where I think this is, at least partially, if not mostly, the issue.
See, my perspective is from not only someone who likes gear, but as someone who has invested into Canon. It would take something monumental to make me change brands. There was a point, when I bought my 5DIII, when I considered the Nikon D800. But I went 5DIII and now have >$15,000 invested.
So, while it would take something monumental to get me to switch brands, I absolutely plan to someday upgrade from the 5DIII to another Canon camera. Thus, from my perspective, what has improved from the 5DIII to the 5DIV is relevant. Or comparing the 5DIV to the 5DsR/1DxII. And you did some of that. But not much. Statements about expectations that the sensor is improved but still not as good as Sony, or about a Canon menu system that I am going to use no matter what camera I have is at best irrelevant but if done repetitiously, a massive turn off.
So, from the perspective of someone handling many different brands, perhaps distinguishing between the brands is relevant. But I wonder how many readers share that perspective? At best, I would think only those about to buy into a system. But for those of us already in the system, it really isn't.
I do watch and read a good number of reviews, and there are some reviewers that seem to think that you can Frankenstein a camera together. Take what you like from each brand. But, of course, at a minimum because of patents, you can't. Apparently, as is evidenced above, you would take Canon's DPAF. Great. But I have to buy an entire camera as I've yet to see a camera with the best features of each brand for sale.