unfocused
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zlatko said:SwampYankee said:Canon trails Nikon and Sony in only one important category....sensors...Canons are not as good.....Like I said "It's the sensors stupid!" CLOSE THE GAP CANON! as for what my engineering expertise is (Masters in Chemical Engineering) is not at all important. I am speaking as a consumer. Why I want is a Camera with a better sensor. I like really, really , big prints. The Sony A7R and the Nikon D800E are much better at doing that. I like Canon, I have lots of Canon glass....CANON NEEDS BETTER SENSORS
It depends on what you are photographing. Canon sensors work very well for me. Canon knows their market. They know that most photographers don't make really, really big prints (and many don't may any prints). Many of their customers don't want/need a really high pixel count and have expressly said, "Please don't give us more megapixels!". They also know that their current sensors are excellent for high ISO — important for many customers. They also know that some photographers prefer Canon color to Nikon/Sony color, especially for photos of people. So Canon doesn't actually "need" better sensors, although I'm sure they are working on that. No doubt they'll offer better sensors some day, and that will be welcome, but for the time being they are really doing OK.
Perhaps you really do need a better sensor, I don't know. But I do know that Canon sensors have served well for all sorts of professional work: advertising, landscape, portraits, weddings, photojournalism, fine art, sports, etc., etc., etc., ... including, for example, Salgado's magnificent, over-sized book "Genesis". And I won't mention filmmaking. So that covers rather a lot.
Very well put.
I have to wonder what SwampYankee considers really, really big prints, what sort of post-processing he/she does to prepare the files for large prints and if he/she is using a professional printer. It isn't always the sensor.
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