dilbert said:
neuroanatomist said:
privatebydesign said:
Er, I think you need to check your dates.
+1 It's always amusing when people don't check their facts before posting...more so when it's a pattern.
The analogy of the 1DIII is an interesting choice, since Canon recalled them for the AF fix - a very direct way to deal with a known issue, rather than offering a 'upgrade' as a fix.
Except that the "fix" never really fixed the problem completely.
http://www.robgalbraith.com/multi_pageb10a.html?cid=7-8740-9068-10086
Well it kinda depends, the whole situation was a mess and there is no denying some cameras did suffer some AF issues in some situations, however, there are an awful lot of people who used and still use the 1D MkIII and have never had AF issues, that was the thing that took so much fixing. A noticeable issue across every camera is comparatively easy to fix, a consistent issue among some cameras is also a relatively easy forensic diagnosis and repair, but an inconsistent issue among some cameras is devilishly difficult to fix. And it isn't like Canon didn't try.
Canon sent a team of technicians to Canada to work with Galbraith because they couldn't get repeatable results that matched Galbraith's in Japan, they spent a lot of time money and effort trying to get consistency in the failure and even Galbraith himself admitted they had done so much testing they believed they had lost sight of any issue and were going in circles. Canon lost hope in his methodology and recalled their team, he kept badmouthing them and lost a lot of goodwill from Canon (as did Andy Rouse in the UK, who very publicly trashed Canon and moved to Nikon, subsequently he used the 1Dx and MkII teles and is a Canon shooter again, but he didn't get involved in the politics this time and made his swap with a much lower profile), of course Galbraith did what so many people who upset the statu quo do, he sidestepped his profession and became a teacher.