Lee Jay said:The Flasher said:No AA filter, dual, identical card slots please, and if it's aimed at the studio, articulating touch screen as well.
No AA filter = no sale.
HurtinMinorKey said:DarkKnightNine said:The last time I remember them doing anything that significant was adding radio to the 600EX-RT Flashes, but even that was half-assed because they took away optical IR for no particular reason.
I think the 600EX has both radio and IR.
Errr... of the four EF-M lenses we get to choose from... (11-22, 18-55, 22, 55-200)ahsanford said:raptor3x said:ahsanford said:But I still don't think Canon has launched a mirrorless system until they give us a @#$%ing EVF and more than two native lenses to choose from at B&H. The embarrassment of the EOS-M is not the product so much as Canon pushing a ship in flames out of port with a vague intention to 'put that fire out soon'.
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That 22mm pancake is one hell of a lens of the two we get to choose from.
I'll edit your sentence above. :I stand behind the original argument.
I agree with you completely (it's a great lens), but that's like enjoying your new car... that doesn't have brakes or any gears above second. EOS-M is super-high IQ point and shoot that happens to have a removable lens mount for some reason. But until the EVF and native EF-M glass comes forward, it's DOA competitively as a standalone system.
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cnardo said:Well for me... I have an SL1 on my belt, a 7D2 for sports/wildlife/BIF and a 5D3 for landscapes/portraits/low light and everything else.... not clear to me why I would buy a 50MP camera (just landscapes???)
Some of my buddies that shoot the Nikon have complained about their 36MP camera in that their Computer bogs down with so much info (think Raw file size) ... almost all have had to then go out and buy bigger/faster computers for PP and storage! Something else to consider!![]()
tron said:Errr... of the four EF-M lenses we get to choose from... (11-22, 18-55, 22, 55-200)ahsanford said:raptor3x said:ahsanford said:But I still don't think Canon has launched a mirrorless system until they give us a @#$%ing EVF and more than two native lenses to choose from at B&H. The embarrassment of the EOS-M is not the product so much as Canon pushing a ship in flames out of port with a vague intention to 'put that fire out soon'.
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That 22mm pancake is one hell of a lens of the two we get to choose from.
I'll edit your sentence above. :I stand behind the original argument.
I agree with you completely (it's a great lens), but that's like enjoying your new car... that doesn't have brakes or any gears above second. EOS-M is super-high IQ point and shoot that happens to have a removable lens mount for some reason. But until the EVF and native EF-M glass comes forward, it's DOA competitively as a standalone system.
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I agree....ahsanford said:cnardo said:Well for me... I have an SL1 on my belt, a 7D2 for sports/wildlife/BIF and a 5D3 for landscapes/portraits/low light and everything else.... not clear to me why I would buy a 50MP camera (just landscapes???)
Some of my buddies that shoot the Nikon have complained about their 36MP camera in that their Computer bogs down with so much info (think Raw file size) ... almost all have had to then go out and buy bigger/faster computers for PP and storage! Something else to consider!![]()
Everyone said that would happen when the D800 was announced and sure enough, it happened. But people used it and said "this is worth getting a faster computer and a bigger hard drive." Nikon of course now has the FrankeNikon 24 MP D750 which is being viewed as a pretty well put together FF rig without the burden of the huge files. As inventory and obsolescence-insane having many non-gripped FF bodies is, it lets Nikon scratch some different userbases itches really hard -- one high resolution monster, one higher burst with a tilty/flippy screen, one more vanilla for cost, perhaps a nearly-dedicated video rig like the a7S someday, etc.
But back to your point -- I think if the sensor is worth it (interpret that as you will), people will cope and get the hardware they need to manage it. I imagine this same discussion happened when Canon offered 21.1 MP bodies years ago, right?
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Sportsgal501 said:I hope it's a full frame.
Don Haines said:I agree....ahsanford said:cnardo said:Well for me... I have an SL1 on my belt, a 7D2 for sports/wildlife/BIF and a 5D3 for landscapes/portraits/low light and everything else.... not clear to me why I would buy a 50MP camera (just landscapes???)
Some of my buddies that shoot the Nikon have complained about their 36MP camera in that their Computer bogs down with so much info (think Raw file size) ... almost all have had to then go out and buy bigger/faster computers for PP and storage! Something else to consider!![]()
Everyone said that would happen when the D800 was announced and sure enough, it happened. But people used it and said "this is worth getting a faster computer and a bigger hard drive." Nikon of course now has the FrankeNikon 24 MP D750 which is being viewed as a pretty well put together FF rig without the burden of the huge files. As inventory and obsolescence-insane having many non-gripped FF bodies is, it lets Nikon scratch some different userbases itches really hard -- one high resolution monster, one higher burst with a tilty/flippy screen, one more vanilla for cost, perhaps a nearly-dedicated video rig like the a7S someday, etc.
But back to your point -- I think if the sensor is worth it (interpret that as you will), people will cope and get the hardware they need to manage it. I imagine this same discussion happened when Canon offered 21.1 MP bodies years ago, right?
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Spending $3000 to $4000 on a camera and not spending $200 on a hard drive seems like an unlikely pairing....
ahsanford said:Lee Jay said:The Flasher said:No AA filter, dual, identical card slots please, and if it's aimed at the studio, articulating touch screen as well.
No AA filter = no sale.
Just curious how polarizing the AA filter is for the various camps. I really don't understand it as a feature / value proposition.
AA filter = a positive for folks shooting video, right? Something to do with moire?
No-AA filter = a positive for detail / sharpness / resolution junkies, right? Landscapers and... macro folks, perhaps?
(The above is my terrible understanding of this presented as a skeleton for more knowledgable folks to beat up / rearrange for my betterment).
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DarkKnightNine said:FF is a must if I were considering this camera. I couldn't image getting decent performance from 50MP squeezed onto an APS-C sized sensor. Larger than FF would be a very welcomed surprise that would have me crying with tears of joy.Sportsgal501 said:I hope it's a full frame.
You have made a good point about the 5DIII birthday. I was surprised when Canon came up with the 7D2 without a significant sensor jump. However with Lexar making their 2000X SD cards UH3, perhaps in the next year (or 2), Canon may feel that it is time to have a high MP sensor with dual processors to give a 6FPS rate. If so and if they had even image quality that I see from the Sony sensors in the form of the D810, I will buy Canon once again. I have missed using my great Canon tilt shift lenses as well as my 500mm supertele.Eldar said:The 5DIII will be 3 years old in March next year. A move to 50MP will pretty much follow Moor´s law. That same law should indicate just over a doubling of its computing power and given the speed of new memory cards, we should a least expect a camera that could chew 50MP at a slightly higher speed than the 5DIII and thus see at least 6, probably 8 fps.
As for AF system, there is no reason not to expect something beyond what the 7DII have. And I don´t see why we should´t expect more intelligence and speed in the processing part of it. More AF points, better tracking, better coverage of the image area etc.
The big questions for me though are what we will see in terms of DR, noise and ISO performance. A 5DIII just ramped up to 50MP and the rest same same ... Not tempting enough.
Bruce Photography said:You have made a good point about the 5DIII birthday. I was surprised when Canon came up with the 7D2 without a significant sensor jump. However with Lexar making their 2000X SD cards UH3, perhaps in the next year (or 2), Canon may feel that it is time to have a high MP sensor with dual processors to give a 6FPS rate.
The Flasher said:ahsanford said:Lee Jay said:The Flasher said:No AA filter, dual, identical card slots please, and if it's aimed at the studio, articulating touch screen as well.
No AA filter = no sale.
Just curious how polarizing the AA filter is for the various camps. I really don't understand it as a feature / value proposition.
AA filter = a positive for folks shooting video, right? Something to do with moire?
No-AA filter = a positive for detail / sharpness / resolution junkies, right? Landscapers and... macro folks, perhaps?
(The above is my terrible understanding of this presented as a skeleton for more knowledgable folks to beat up / rearrange for my betterment).
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High MP have less moiree issues as there's less interpolation which causes it.
ahsanford said:Lee Jay said:The Flasher said:No AA filter, dual, identical card slots please, and if it's aimed at the studio, articulating touch screen as well.
No AA filter = no sale.
Just curious how polarizing the AA filter is for the various camps. I really don't understand it as a feature / value proposition.
AA filter = a positive for folks shooting video, right? Something to do with moire?
No-AA filter = a positive for detail / sharpness / resolution junkies, right? Landscapers and... macro folks, perhaps?
(The above is my terrible understanding of this presented as a skeleton for more knowledgable folks to beat up / rearrange for my betterment).
- A
The 7DII is chewing 20,2MP at 10fps and its buffer handles an infinite number of jpegs and about 30 RAW. Which translates to 4 fps and 12-13 RAWs in 50MP terms. But that is if a new camera is a copy of the 7DII for every thing else but resolution. Is that very likely? The 50MP camera comes a year later, will cost more and can justify more computing power, can use faster memory cards etc. etc.ahsanford said:Highly doubt you'll see much more than 4 FPS from any cameras wielding the next gen of high MP sensors in the near future.