and then undercutting the price of the original product.
More likely the price from Yongnuo reflects the true manufacturing cost of the lens plus a small bit on top for margin. That is, the Yongnuo price is not inflated because the lens has the word "Canon" on it, etc.
slclick said:Students win!
miah said:slclick said:Students win!
This is short-sighted thinking. No one wins when primary design work is stolen (although in this case, as pointed out earlier, Canon's patents may have already expired). Without a company--Canon, Apple, [insert innovative company here]--being able to reap the rewards of their labor, investment and risk in R&D, they will have no incentive to develop better products. The patent system, though flawed, was created for a reason. It rewards innovation by giving the innovator a protected and relatively short period of time to establish their brand/product before everyone else is free to copy their design. If the design is good, and people are willing to buy it at the price offered, everyone benefits.
We vote with our dollars. I prefer mine to finance innovation and reward the risk takers.
kphoto99 said:So basically you are saying that without competition Canon will produce innovating products at a good price.
How is that working out? Nobody is better then Canon in any areas?
Also, didn't Canon start by coping German camera manufactures products?
300D said:Miah
I understand and agree with your view; apart from the YN-E3-RT my gear is all Canon or Sigma. But I was very frustrated to find that the Canon RT transmitter locked me out of a lot of the higher functionality of the device (and had less options), mainly because I only had a recent but not current camera body; so yes, in protest I voted with my £. I only hope that the YN-E3-RT proves to be reliable, and that canon updates this product giving me a fist party option in the future.
miah said:The patent system, though flawed, was created for a reason. It rewards innovation by giving the innovator a protected and relatively short period of time to establish their brand/product before everyone else is free to copy their design. If the design is good, and people are willing to buy it at the price offered, everyone benefits.
bmwzimmer said:Design patents are valid for 20 years (in the US). I'm not saying it's right or wrong but any company can clone away if they choose.
GammyKnee said:Personally I think it's good to have another lens manufacturer starting up.
DRR said:Yongnuo should have invested minimal dollars in an external design to give them their own external "look." Patents or not, 5 blades vs 7, etc. you will always be called a "clone" if your product looks so similar to another.
DRR said:Instead they choose to directly copy, almost exactly, not only the internal design of the Canon lenses but the outside as well. And the perception completely changes.