Quite simply, taken as a whole, it is the best camera of its class that we've ever seen, and one of those rare cameras that won't look out of date in a couple of years' time.
ericax17 said:Hey everyone!
I'm looking into buying my first DSLR and was interested in the T2i. But it came out way back in February, and I was wondering if a replacement of it is going to come out anytime soon, because I would rather wait for it.
Thanks,
Erica
B&H might be offering you a couple cheap lenses you will have to sell to make that price back (which is, honestly, what I've been considering doing with the Pixma photo printer rebate), but the actual body only price is still around $720 (Adorama; B&H prices always track when I compare them, usually right down to the penny, at least for new stuff).ELK said:For now I'm waiting T2i to drop in price a little bit more, say near $500 (it's comes now for example around $925at BH as a 18-55 IS and 55-250 IS kit, so when we subtact the lens prices, the body price makes about $600).
There are lots of people who will buy a DSLR for $300, but not for even $500. Or put another way, they will buy the $300 camera, always, but maybe have their mind set on a DSLR. Everybody has to target that price range with something - perhaps an older camera that's been priced down - because the competition will make the sale if they don't. You can't entirely dismiss the idea of budget DSLR users as people who should be going to compact cameras, because they might buy any type of lens for their DSLR. I have a TS-E for my own T1i which is going to seem like overkill to an extent, but if Canon had priced the camera out of my budget they wouldn't have made the lens sale.oupoliscigrad said:At this point I think Canon needs to start simplifying their lineup in terms of pro-level features/controls and then put as much work as possible into improving the sensors, so they have fewer tiers to develop for.
For now I'm waiting T2i to drop in price a little bit more, say near $500 (it's comes now for example around $925 at BH as a 18-55 IS and 55-250 IS kit, so when we subtract the lens prices, the body price makes about $600).
ericax17 said:But it came out way back in February, and I was wondering if a replacement of it is going to come out anytime soon, because I would rather wait for it.
Braith7 said:Are the days of the entry level DSLR numbered?
Are the days of the entry level DSLR numbered?
unfocused said:There are just too many bodies and lenses already out there to walk away from this market anytime soon.
neuroanatomist said:unfocused said:There are just too many bodies and lenses already out there to walk away from this market anytime soon.
Remember when Apple released the iMac with no internal floppy drive? Everyone said that was a terrible idea that would fail in the marketplace. Apple was just ahead of the curve - try to find any PC sold today that with an internal floppy drive...
I'm sure similar statements were made in 1987, when Canon abandoned the FD lens mount which had been the standard on Canon bodies and lenses for 16 years.
Nikon, on the other hand, has used the F mount for over 50 years now (resulting in lots of confusion, IMO, about which lens features are compatible with which bodies, even though all the lenses physically mount to all the bodies).
My point is that Canon has expressed a willingness to make some radical shifts in the past, despite the impact on consumers. I agree that i's unlikely the APS-C format will go away soon, but never say never...