AvTvM said:you can save yourself you useless rethoric tricks and attempts to make and make me sound like I am the ONLY person on earth more interested in a good mirrorless system than in antiquated mirrorslappers.
It is so EVIDENT, what the market wants: Not everybody, but MANY, MANY, MANY photographers from entry level to advanced to semi-pro to pro would just love to get a great Canon EOS-M "Pro" body right now for APS-C or a killer Nikon APS-C MILC system (instead of a pathetic Nikon 1).
And MANY MORE would immediately shell out money for a Canon or Nikon FF MILC system fully competitive with Sony A7/R/S II.
Denial is really ridiculous.
I don't think anyone disagrees that mirrorless is the future -- I think they are arguing mirrorless is not the present.
You speak of mirrorless in revered tones that would imply it is outselling SLRs today. It's not even close to doing that (unless you include cell phones, P&S, etc. in that tally), and in ignoring that data, you come across as delusional. (That tends to undermine the argument you are making.)
You speak of SLRs like they are a thing of the past, a relic about to die, etc. In fact, SLRs broadly and comprehensively outperform today's mirrorless options except for a few very small and specific needs that do not overpower mirrorless' glaring present limitations, e.g.:
- 1/32,000 shutter is undeniably neato, but carrying 3-4 batteries is not.
- EVFs with histo / peaking / brightness amplification are great, but not if they miss the shot due to lag.
- Being able to use other companies' lenses is amazing but it's not for everyone as AF performance with adapters is spotty.
These are just a few examples of why mirrorless has a ton of SLR users waiting on the side of the pool rather than jumping in. It will happen. But it will not happen soon.
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