Neither does a phone but millions (billions?) of photos are taken on one each day.The m200 does not have great ergonomics
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Neither does a phone but millions (billions?) of photos are taken on one each day.The m200 does not have great ergonomics
I am not following your point here. The only missing piece for native RF-S is for wide angle glass.If Canon does not really put much effort into RF-S lenses, they should allow third party manufacturers to produce those. That would be a nice start. The problem would be of course that those lenses also work on full frame. So they would have to have sure that Tamron and Sigma do not provide a full frame image circle on their RF-S glass.
You can submit your feedback to Canon on their support page in each region.... which I have done in the past.I hope canon read all coments here.
Having the 3 wheels on the R5 is plenty for me so I haven't been using it. Also because I didn't get the control ring R mount adapter so I don't have it on all my lenses. So far, I haven't missed it and I can't use it underwater either in my housing and I use EF glass there (wide/fisheye/macro).To me, the control ring is one of the most impressive things about the RF mount design. It's an absolute coup, and yet it's the most neglected. Consider this: with the control ring plus two body control dials, you can take complete control over the entire exposure triangle pretty much simultaneously because you have both hands involved. Try that with separate thumb wheels. Having the control ring really made it easier for me to make quick adjustments on the fly, once I got used to using it. After a while, the gripe starts to sound less like "Canon won't give me the proper controls" and more like "I'm resistant to learning anything new."
I use mine (sometimes) for Kelvin adjustment.What does everyone use the control ring for once you have ISO/shutter/aperture already available?
Exposure compensation when in auto ISO.What does everyone use the control ring for once you have ISO/shutter/aperture already available?
I tend to use half shutter/rear wheel for this as I fix it to eg -1 stop for indoor sports where I will deliberately underexpose as the uniforms are white and I need a faster shutter speed (using post to push the exposure).Exposure compensation when in auto ISO.
Is this to adjust for indoor lighting for jpegs?I use mine (sometimes) for Kelvin adjustment.
For quite a few years, both Canon and Nikon users have been complaining about this. Neither company has any interest in APS-C as a pro system. Amateur, yes, prosumer, maybe. But the world has been moving on to full frame for some time, and I really don’t see that movement changing. It’s one reason Canon’s “M” series has been so popular. So popular in fact that it’s been either one or two in practically every mirrorless market it competes in, despite cries for better (more Pro-like), and more lenses. Canon has to duplicate that success with the R Mount.What about a high end APS-C camera? APS-C sadly is treated by Canon as a format for amateurs, although many professionals might want the longer reach that the crop gives them. Of course Canon did their market research, but I still see a lot of complaints in many R7 reviews. Mainly about the bad rolling shutter (The R7 needs more than 30ms to read out the sensor) and the lack of high quality glass for APS-C. Why can't there be something like a flagship APS-C camera for maybe $3,000 or so? Is there no demand for something like that? Don't wildlife photographers always crop anyway? Of course they could use buy the upcoming R1 and just use crop mode, but that would be overkill.
The question for us (as Canon should already know) is whether there is a significant demand for pro APS-C bodies.For quite a few years, both Canon and Nikon users have been complaining about this. Neither company has any interest in APS-C as a pro system. Amateur, yes, prosumer, maybe. But the world has been moving on to full frame for some time, and I really don’t see that movement changing. It’s one reason Canon’s “M” series has been so popular. So popular in fact that it’s been either one or two in practically every mirrorless market it competes in, despite cries for better (more Pro-like), and more lenses. Canon has to duplicate that success with the R Mount.
Maybe it is not in Canon's best interest, but it is quite an evil move against its own customers. Canon of course likes to frame it only as a measure against the competition, but for the customer it means that he pays a lot of money for a camera and in return he can't use all third party lenses that Sony and Nikon users can enjoy. That reminds me of Apple. They invented that really bad and slow "Lightning" plug, which even had exposed contacts. The only reason was to be able to charge a huge license fee from all accessory manufacturers who wanted to connect their devices with an iPhone or iPad. With the RF mount it is the same. It is good if a company innovates, but it should not be possible to use that innovation to block competition.I am not following your point here. The only missing piece for native RF-S is for wide angle glass.
Adapted EF-S (and 3rd party EF-S) lenses can be used today at a reasonable cost.
Can you share your thoughts on why it is in Canon's best interest to allow 3rd party glass and which ones in particular?
Warning: rant ahead![...] That reminds me of Apple. They invented that really bad and slow "Lightning" plug, which even had exposed contacts. The only reason was to be able to charge a huge license fee from all accessory manufacturers who wanted to connect their devices with an iPhone or iPad. [...]
$1 sounds okay, but I recently saw a YouTube video that mentioned that Apple wants 10% of the sale price of any product that has a Lightning connector. Not sure if that was mentioned by Marques Brownlee or or someone else.The $1 per unit I've seen is quite steep
A lot of speculation and half knowledge, don't you think so?$1 sounds okay, but I recently saw a YouTube video that mentioned that Apple wants 10% of the sale price of any product that has a Lightning connector. Not sure if that was mentioned by Marques Brownlee or or someone else.
Some licensing fees are really bad. The MP3 format was invented by a public German research institute. They charged a small license fee for it and invested that money into further research. However one company from the US had a patent on some algorithm that was needed for the MP3 format to work. That might have been 5% of the innovation, but they charged huge licensing fees for that just because they could. So most of the research was done by the German scientist, but most of the money went somewhere else. That is a common trick in patent law. Buy patents for simple things and if those things are needed, charge a large fee for that. Many companies do not innovate at all, but just buy patents to make money from them. Apple and other companies often are the victims of that.
The video I mentioned claimed that Apple might stick with Lightning because of the licensing fees. USB-C is not really a foreign technology for Apple. Apple was one of the companies that developed USB-C together with others. Apple uses the same plug for Thunderbolt for example.
Not having a full size HDMI port on a large camera like the R3 is really embarrassing for Canon, if Sony manages to ship much smaller cameras with a full size HDMI port. Maybe it is about licensing fees again. Not sure who owns the license for HDMI, but a full size HDMI port might cost a few dollars more in license fees than a smaller port. That is the most likely reason. It also was the reason for the video record limit of 29:59 minutes. The EU has higher copyright fees for video cameras that can shoot more than 30 minutes.
I wonder if the R50 will really be a camera like the M50 that is so cheap that you can buy it as you backup camera even if you might hardly ever use it. It should stay below 600 Euros without lens, but I have low hopes for that.
Last I checked, Canon was a for-profit corporation, not a philanthropic organization.Maybe it is not in Canon's best interest, but it is quite an evil move against its own customers.
Sure, sure. I mean, that’s the point of the patent process, but I guess to you that’s just more evil, companies should just give away their intellectual property. To heck with profit, let’s just make people happy. Until we run out of money.It is good if a company innovates, but it should not be possible to use that innovation to block competition.
Doesn't the same logic apply to Canon lenses? Like, Canon, in order not to be "evil", should either stop making them for the RF mount, or start making them for the Z and E mounts as well?Maybe it is not in Canon's best interest, but it is quite an evil move against its own customers. Canon of course likes to frame it only as a measure against the competition, but for the customer it means that he pays a lot of money for a camera and in return he can't use all third party lenses that Sony and Nikon users can enjoy.
The equivalent for the lenses would be that Canon would allow third party manufacturers to use the RF mount for their cameras. I would really love to see that. The already allowed that for RED cameras. If Canon are confident with the quality of their cameras and lenses, they should not fear that. If Canon cameras are really better, people will still buy Canon cameras. And wouldn't it be great for Canon if Nikon users bought Canon lenses?Doesn't the same logic apply to Canon lenses? Like, Canon, in order not to be "evil", should either stop making them for the RF mount, or start making them for the Z and E mounts as well?
Canon get a lot of feedback from reviewers and professional users, and also direct from customers via questionnaires. They won't be reading forums or comments pages themselves because it's just too much to wade through. However, reviewers read forums and comments pages, and are very much in touch with reader's opinions, so I think it's likely that Canon will get to hear about *common* criticisms or suggestions made here.They almost certainly don't. Would you like their email address?