weekendshooter said:The only gaping hole I see in the current lens lineup is a cheap full-frame 35mm; the fantastic 35/1.8G crop lens makes me jealous whenever I use my girlfriend's D5100.
neuroanatomist said:NormanBates said:("interlaced" is not video, it's just a tool for torturing my poor soul)
I thought it was something to do with shoes, actually.![]()
Mt Spokane Photography said:People have been making comments like this for many years now. The vast majority of Rebel buyers walk into Best Buy or other big box store and go for the cheapest camera that looks professional. 95% of them have no clue as to what the specifications mean.Basti187 said:wow that will kill the rebel sales, sounds like a very nice dslr, especially for video with 1080/60
Canon has been pulling away from Nikon in DSLR sales.
Its kinda like the Sony Betamax versus VHS. Salesmanship and lower price trumps technical capability every time.
Canon will drop another new model with a couple of minor new features next Spring, and people will rush to buy it because its the latest model.
cliffwang said:...I can tell you it's changing. 50 people in my office and about 10 DSLR camera users. 2 were Nikon users and 8 were Canon users in the past few years. This year one switched to Nikon and another one is going to get D600 soon. I know losing two users for Canon is not a big thing.
neuroanatomist said:The thing is, the people on the forum are not, generally speaking, Canon's major target audience.DB said:Canon is listening to customers, they're just not listening to the vocal minority ???
Marsu42 said:But what silent majority is supposed to be Canon's target audience that wants to pay more to get less? Even newbies to dlsr won't say "what? built-in gps? I'll take two!" when the Nikon body next to it has more mp and a lower price tag.
Apple managed to cultivate a "cool" factor that Canon will never have.neuroanatomist said:Marsu42 said:But what silent majority is supposed to be Canon's target audience that wants to pay more to get less? Even newbies to dlsr won't say "what? built-in gps? I'll take two!" when the Nikon body next to it has more mp and a lower price tag.
For many years, it has been argued that people who buy Macs, and more recently, iPhones, are paying more to get less. So maybe it's the same silent majority that has made Apple the largest company in the world...
wellfedCanuck said:Apple managed to cultivate a "cool" factor that Canon will never have.neuroanatomist said:Marsu42 said:But what silent majority is supposed to be Canon's target audience that wants to pay more to get less? Even newbies to dlsr won't say "what? built-in gps? I'll take two!" when the Nikon body next to it has more mp and a lower price tag.
For many years, it has been argued that people who buy Macs, and more recently, iPhones, are paying more to get less. So maybe it's the same silent majority that has made Apple the largest company in the world...
wellfedCanuck said:...a "cool" factor that Canon will never have.
neuroanatomist said:For many years, it has been argued that people who buy Macs, and more recently, iPhones, are paying more to get less. So maybe it's the same silent majority that has made Apple the largest company in the world...
Marsu42 said:The only strategy I can see from Canon atm is to make people believe "it's expensive, it has to be stellar".
neuroanatomist said:it's possible Canon does not expect to move a huge volume of them (unlike, say, the 24-105/4L IS or 17-40/4L), and has priced it higher to compensate.
neuroanatomist said:cliffwang said:...I can tell you it's changing. 50 people in my office and about 10 DSLR camera users. 2 were Nikon users and 8 were Canon users in the past few years. This year one switched to Nikon and another one is going to get D600 soon. I know losing two users for Canon is not a big thing.
Two people in my office just bought 5DIII's. Since only one person in your office has actually switched, Canon is up by a net of one user and a few more yen as well. These small sample sizes are so informative…. :![]()
cliffwang said:neuroanatomist said:cliffwang said:...I can tell you it's changing. 50 people in my office and about 10 DSLR camera users. 2 were Nikon users and 8 were Canon users in the past few years. This year one switched to Nikon and another one is going to get D600 soon. I know losing two users for Canon is not a big thing.
Two people in my office just bought 5DIII's. Since only one person in your office has actually switched, Canon is up by a net of one user and a few more yen as well. These small sample sizes are so informative…. :![]()
Are the two people are original Canon users? If so, no surprise here. Three of seven current Canon DSLR users has 5D3 in my office. That's just routing upgrade for our gears. I believe many D700 users have also upgraded to D800 in the past months. My point is I see people switching to Nikon from Canon. However, I don't see anyone switch to Canon from Nikon recently.
I have to agree with you that I can only see small sample size here. However, that's what I have seen in the past few months.
Marsu42 said:"Two mouse buttons confuse me" Mac-users aside, iPhones offer not less, but more for more money: fast hardware, more apps, a fine-tuned integrated and *working* ecosystem, better usability, better os upgrades (unlike Android). And unlike Canon Apple makes their customers go ecstatic with each and every product, while Canon just manages to make most people I know shake their heads in disbelief.
But the main difference is: Apple is way more innovative while Canon is the most conservative company I can imagine, the current Canon execs would get fired @Apple in no time. The only strategy I can see from Canon atm is to make people believe "it's expensive, it has to be stellar".
neuroanatomist said:wellfedCanuck said:...a "cool" factor that Canon will never have.
I disagree. Canon paints many of their lenses white specifically so they are "cool"...![]()
neuroanatomist said:DB said:Canon is listening to customers, they're just not listening to the vocal minority ???
+1
The thing is, the people on the forum are not, generally speaking, Canon's major target audience.
cliffwang said:That's because Canon was doing right and has bigger brand name. However, I can tell you it's changing. 50 people in my office and about 10 DSLR camera users. 2 were Nikon users and 8 were Canon users in the past few years. This year one switched to Nikon and another one is going to get D600 soon. I know losing two users for Canon is not a big thing. However, for me that's 25% market share losing for Canon and 100% market share gaining for Nikon.