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Originally Posted by Samurai People who are making those comments are only thinking Nikon V1/J1, which uses a much smaller sensor. Rest of the mirrorless world uses the same sensor as their dSLR counterpart, so why can't they match their dSLR cousins who use the same sensor?  The trouble is rest of the mirrorless camera world is not visible to them since those are neither Canon nor Nikon.
But now Canon has made a very smart move. They didn't take the garden path lead by Nikon with their tiny sensor. Instead, they are offering the APS-C size sensor, same as their entry/mid level dSLRs, a path taken by every other mirror less make except Nikon.
This changes the game significantly. Now the Canikon crowd has only Canon to look towards in the mirror less world. Nikon V1/J1 with its tiny sensor can no longer stand shoulder-to-shoulder with Canon in the mirror less world. |
AFAIK only Canon/Sony/Samsung has aps-c sensors, rest are a sensors with 2x crop factor.
At this moment both Canon/Nikon are just *ME-Too* candidates, Canon a little less, Canon obviously made a better choice in terms of sensor but still missed the marks that should have been there, viewfinder, faster AF, better grip. But despite all these niggles, Canon still has the biggest fan base so it WILL sell like hot cakes.
But the thing that bothers me is Nikon/Pentax took a huge risk, just like Fuji but Canon has been hesitant to take risks and just came to party with *me-too* attitude.
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Originally Posted by Samurai That will really piss off people who invested in the 1st gen Nikon cameras.
That is why I am just sitting back and watching the scene. If Canon comes out with a fast EOS M zoom starting at 15mm by next year, I might switch over to EOS M family. As much as I love my Olympus Camera/lens collection, I am getting really tired of not being able to sell any of my old gear. |
You should try selling over ebay international. Olympus gear (m43 mount) is selling quite quickly. I would not mind some Oly glass myself.
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Originally Posted by R2D2 Of course that applies only to DSLRs with cropped sensors.
+1
That Nikon V1 was a nice try by Nikon, but not good enough. Canon using an APS-C sensor in their mirrorless camera was a real smart move. But I don't recall a EV - only a monitor which can be a drawback in bright sunlight. |
Canon has done 3 smart moves, EF adapter as a package, better implementation of touchscreen and aps-c sensor. But then again there are few things lacking.
Even Canon 1100D is almost half the price with single lens kit, or with newly released 40mm pancake it would be same price. Way more controls and OVF and built in flash. At 150g heavier, neither are pocket able though.
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Originally Posted by R2D2 I wont be surprised if Nikon too ups the game in the 2nd generation Nikon 1 cameras. That's the good thing about mirrorless - exciting because the format is evolving so fast while the downside is loss of value over a short period of time. |
Evolving is good, loss of value isn't. And to highlight the consumers for m43 market, I just bought a Panasonic G2 twin lens kit with less than 100 shutter count for $150 AUD, also bought a GH2 recently got $250. Both of these sold for $800+ themselves less than a yr ago. Compare it to Nikon D90 is still selling secondhand for $400AUD+ and its much older camera. People are buying these as impulse and then not using them, but this makes it good for me, I can get gear cheaper. OFF TOPIC, I also picked up 135mm f2 DC in brand new condition for half the price.
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Originally Posted by R2D2 DSLRs are comparatively stodgy and revolutionary changes are few and far between. |
Marketing 101, if you can make money from same thing then keep on doing it. Consider OLED tv's, Discovery channel broad casted a documentary on OLED panels back in 1998, assuming it was made in 1997. That is 15yrs ago when researchers had 40"+ OLED panels ready. Still we are buying LCD`s and Plasma`s because we are being fed one marketing line "Too hard/expensive to make OLED panels", basically to end the story, marketing will keep saying its too expensive to make and hence we will need to sell them for that much higher price.
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Originally Posted by Samurai Aren't these like budget lenses? I am not familiar with Nikon lenses, but their zoom range alone is making me suspicious. Good lenses rarely have more than 5X zoom range. |
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Originally Posted by R2D2 I wont call them budget as the 18-200 is nearly Rs 54K (USD 850 MSRP in the US), and the 18-300 will be more expensive (USD 1000 MSRP) in the US. Their IQ is acceptable in line with the convenience ie zoom range they offer |
These are expensive lenses with budget IQ. I would rather suggest Nikon 55-200 mm F4.0-5.6 ASFDX VR N, Its an amazing lens at a ridiculous budget price. IQ is almost as good as 70-200mm VR1 but AF is a bit slow compared to it. But AF is still plenty good. 50-300 is supposed to be good, but I have no experience with it.
I always consider extreme zooms as a safe alternative when one can only travel with 1 lens and is physically not able to change lenses in the field (dust storms, snow storms, etc).