We need to compare SLR sales over the last fifty years.
Between 2000 and 2010 we had an anomoly, every year new cameras were making last year's model obsolete. That had never happened before.
The 1DsMkIII is still an industry standard, 1Dx owners have a sport equivalent of that body only with exponentially better high ISO. 5Ds owners will be happy with the output from that camera in a studio setting for many decades.
The market is mature, and people don't need to upgrade anymore. Look at your sales of new bodies in the 80's and that's probably where the industry is headed.
And note that Mirrorless bodies aren't improving very quickly. Sure, they're building a nice ecosystem... of crop sensors and crop size lenses. Sony is the only one aiming for the professional market. If Fuji, Olympus, Panasonic and Samsung all announced full frame compact bodies today, it would be 2030 before they have a competent system. But no-one is doing that, and professionals or anyone else looking for the best capabilities in a system are still going to be buying EOS for the next 20 years at least (more if the crop companies don't give their head a shake sooner rather than later).
And even if a compact alternative exists, SLR has distinct advantages regardless of IQ parity.
Between 2000 and 2010 we had an anomoly, every year new cameras were making last year's model obsolete. That had never happened before.
The 1DsMkIII is still an industry standard, 1Dx owners have a sport equivalent of that body only with exponentially better high ISO. 5Ds owners will be happy with the output from that camera in a studio setting for many decades.
The market is mature, and people don't need to upgrade anymore. Look at your sales of new bodies in the 80's and that's probably where the industry is headed.
And note that Mirrorless bodies aren't improving very quickly. Sure, they're building a nice ecosystem... of crop sensors and crop size lenses. Sony is the only one aiming for the professional market. If Fuji, Olympus, Panasonic and Samsung all announced full frame compact bodies today, it would be 2030 before they have a competent system. But no-one is doing that, and professionals or anyone else looking for the best capabilities in a system are still going to be buying EOS for the next 20 years at least (more if the crop companies don't give their head a shake sooner rather than later).
And even if a compact alternative exists, SLR has distinct advantages regardless of IQ parity.
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