This entire thread is hilarious.
Conflating the needs of the masses as reflected in the sales figures with the needs of enthusiasts and pros - a completely disparate population.
Controlling for nothing, like brand name, education level, etc.
Therefore none of these numbers should be drawn into *any* conversations re: technologies that (1) enthusiasts/pros care about, (2) said technologies that don't have much impact on market share, (3) said technologies that *could* help even laypeople but since the use-cases are not communicated well enough to be ever used, end up being irrelevant to even those use-cases (a failure of many of you here, but mostly of the review/educational sites around the world).
But all that doesn't mean that those new technologies couldn't be used in groundbreaking ways, amongst many people, if iterated on and then taught appropriately.
And honestly, being on here for years, that whole 'teaching part' is never going to happen here. B/c everyone else is far too holed up in their own ways to even consider that someone else coming along might, just might,
have a point.
So we're literally back to the same level of conversation I noticed when I participated in these forums 3 years ago. The entire reason I left. Great to see nothing's changed!
Well, except that you now accept all the claims that Risedal guy made - rather hurtfully to you pity souls - b/c ultimately he was right. But you just don't want to talk about it.
Did I get that about right? Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
Oh, and here's yet another wedding image I was processing from my 5D3 that I decided to throw out b/c by the time I corrected the 3EV vignetting of my 24/1.4 and then added 1.5 stops (b/c I underexposed by 1.5 EV to save the sky/clouds above my subjects), I had this wonder junk overlaid over my image:
I don't know about you, but I just don't deliver that to clients. My D810 wouldn't have even had the smudge related with this noise, b/c it wouldn't have had any(thing but shot) noise to begin with with even a +5 EV push (that's verified; I'm not making it up).
And that's not even talking about some of the other differentiators that differentiate the low end Rebel from Nikon's Rebel competitor: for example, Nikon's Rebel competitor has 39 AF points that can accurate subject track, even detect a face (even when you're using the OVF), and focus on and track it. Will work for your kids playing sports or for your dog running around.
Rebel - can only focus on whatever's the nearest subject it can find within its 9 AF points. Good luck tracking it with those 9 points, especially if something else enters the scene at a similar plane as your kid/pet.
If even that crowd buys Rebels predominantly, then what's the point of this entire conversation? Other than that:
brand names persist. Because of word of mouth. From people like you.