I hate to agree with Neuro, so I won't. 
I'll try to make a real explanation of what's happening instead of merely crowing about market share.
Yup, Canon makes niche lenses, but they mount on "good enough" bodies. That's likely to fill out the niche needs of a few pro's and enthusiasts who otherwise don't mind using a commodity camera body.
But Canon knows how to coast on its market share, much like many other companies do after they make a big market breakthru at some point in the past.
You have to go back to film days when Nikon, Pentax and even Olympus and Minolta were BIG. Canon was in there too but were, as an also-ran, laughed at by Nikon and Pentax users. (kinda like now too but the ratios were different then)
Canon seemed to gain some traction when they went to the EOS mount, developed some good stabilized lenses for that, then made another good surge when their "new" CMOS sensor was outperforming other digital offerings in the new DSLR market. They also developed tremendous market share in compact digital cameras at the outset of that category.
They built a LOT of mindshare and it's stuck, despite the fact that, right now, every other major mfr (Nikon, Sony, Pentax, Fuji, Panasonic, Olympus, maybe even Samsung) use sensors that outperform Canon's in most metrics, despite being smaller.
Canon makes cameras that are "good enough" for many pro's, and more than good enough for most consumers and enthusiasts. Their biggest benefit is they are easy to use and produce decent results, and the common folk like that.
The rest of us buy the "good stuff" from the others, for whom I'm thankful for their continued existence.
I'll try to make a real explanation of what's happening instead of merely crowing about market share.
Yup, Canon makes niche lenses, but they mount on "good enough" bodies. That's likely to fill out the niche needs of a few pro's and enthusiasts who otherwise don't mind using a commodity camera body.
But Canon knows how to coast on its market share, much like many other companies do after they make a big market breakthru at some point in the past.
You have to go back to film days when Nikon, Pentax and even Olympus and Minolta were BIG. Canon was in there too but were, as an also-ran, laughed at by Nikon and Pentax users. (kinda like now too but the ratios were different then)
Canon seemed to gain some traction when they went to the EOS mount, developed some good stabilized lenses for that, then made another good surge when their "new" CMOS sensor was outperforming other digital offerings in the new DSLR market. They also developed tremendous market share in compact digital cameras at the outset of that category.
They built a LOT of mindshare and it's stuck, despite the fact that, right now, every other major mfr (Nikon, Sony, Pentax, Fuji, Panasonic, Olympus, maybe even Samsung) use sensors that outperform Canon's in most metrics, despite being smaller.
Canon makes cameras that are "good enough" for many pro's, and more than good enough for most consumers and enthusiasts. Their biggest benefit is they are easy to use and produce decent results, and the common folk like that.
The rest of us buy the "good stuff" from the others, for whom I'm thankful for their continued existence.
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