xps said:
What is your opinion? Are these Cams so much better?
While some of the CR members here will disparage the poster and the question, the simple fact is
that the other cam's have sensor systems that ARE better than Canon's (astro use might be an exeption) and that allows users a LOT more leeway when editing raw files with much less noise control work. It also tends to provide better color accuracy (less color noise) than Canon's and that can be noticeable.
Canon's system for getting data off the sensor and into the processor was a comparatively good implementation when they came up with it over a decade ago.
Since then they've stuck with the same method. It's evolved; gotten worse (50D), then better (70D).
Meanwhile, all the other mfrs are using a better circuit-system design that's leap-frogged Canon's and is also continuing to evolve and improve to the point that micro-four-thirds sensors, about half the surface area of Canon's APS-C sensors, outperform the Canon stuff by nearly a stop. So that's nearly 2 stops worth better performance per surface area that everyone else can do using different sensor readout and data-transfer technology (Sony's).
As for Canon still being better above 800 iso - not any more. Everybody else has closed the gap and-or beat Canon's higher ISO performance too. That region is now bumping into the limitations of physics so improvements there are more in how the software interprets and manages (smooths) the data.
FWIW, with the level of software now available for managing noise and recovering detail, as long as you choose one of the newer Canon bodies that no longer produce a picket-fence of noise stripes in the shadow areas, you can get good image results. Canon's 70D and 7D2 seem to be pretty good now, if not quite as noise-free and color-pure as the competition. Hopefully the new 5DS series are similarly free of that nasty pattern noise, for the sake of Canon fans and users.
I switched to Anything-But-Canon a few years ago and could not be more pleased with the improvements in raw file quality. That saves me a lot of trouble prepping large format prints.
.. wanna make a Canon comparison look really bad?...plug a Fuji XT1 into the comparison tool ;}
Or a bottom-end Fuji XA1, even more fun. Fuji knows how to do some sneaky in-camera processing that rivals what can be done with a desktop.