ahsanford said:nads said:The fact that Canon has not put a mirrorless body to market of the same specification as the competition has does not, whatsoever, mean that they are behind in mirrorless tech. There isn't a technology out there in a mirrorless body that is beyond Canon's ability to produce. On the opposite side, Canon has AF technology that the competition does not have access to.
I've heard this a lot: "there's nothing Canon can't pull off" / "Canon could drop a AAA mirrorless product on the market whenever it gets around to it" / "just take* DPAF + an amazing EVF + some new lenses, and POW." Personally, I think it's one thing to have all the Lego pieces of tech in a big pile and it's another thing entirely to Frankenstein all of that together into a highly performing package on a first try. Only so much of the EOS-M experience will apply as it currently lacks DPAF, an integral EVF, a chunkier body design, etc.
Do you (or anyone else in this forum) honestly believe Canon's first FF mirrorless offering will be as responsive as 2nd/3rd gen mirrorless rigs from the competition? Will the control layout make sense and not frustrate us? Will it have an EVF that lays everything out just the way you'd like it? Will it be free of peculiar lens compatibility issues or battery conservation problems? I don't think so at all.
I'm not saying 'Canon is behind in mirrorless tech' as a rant that the sky is falling, 'I'm leaving the fold', etc. -- far from it. I'm just saying that they need to walk before they run -- regardless of how well they run in more the mature SLR segments today.
(Agree with the rest of what you said, btw. Good post, thx.)
- A
* In full disclosure, I've certainly alleged this a few times, but more as an aspirational statement for a much better camera, not that Canon would nail that Frankenstein on the first offering.
I honestly do believe they could drop such a product and make it just as reponsive. They can physically build the package and put the software together to make it go.
The company that has years of experience dropping a camera that is only barely better than Nikon's best, and inferior in at least a few key specifications isn't going to do that though.
Canon does not need to walk before it can run. It could go from stand still to sprint between prototype and production. Canon simply has no reason to run and has long proven that the preference is to pass the competition by the slightest margin possible (when even interested in passing the competition).
I do believe this: FF Mirrorless isn't coming in the next 18 months from Canon. They aren't even going to stand up on the FF front. Any statement that they are is a rumor in my book. There will be movement in mirrorless and Canon leadership has said as much. What is missing is any meaningful statement from Canon leadership regarding FF mirrorless.
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