Re: Mirrorless or EVIL Cameras Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeroen I would think Olympus puts a new camera on the market to sell lots of them! not just a few.
I would hold on to that thought of it being inferior until you get a chance to actually see and use this camera and compare. But then again to be honest I don’t hold much hope for the Cannon/Nikon brigade to ever agree anything else is better than their kit. On the upside; whatever Cannon or Nikon does or doesn’t do never keeps me awake. I still can’t tell from a photograph what camera was used. No matter what we call superior/inferior. |
Let's agree to disagree.
But skills being equal, a heavyweight beats a middleweight or a welterweight. For camera systems, weight/size = sensor size. Not even getting into lens ecosystems.
Just because you don't see a difference for the kind of images you shoot (your genre), doesn't mean that there isn't a significant difference for others. Yes, significant. Don't go by the Ming Thein types, who have little clue about action or sports or wildlife shooting, though they obviously have to pretend that they are good in all genres. How many Olympus pros or evangelists shoot action? How much experience does Olympus have re AF performance or action shooting? Olympus was loss making, after restructuring they got their act together. But their R&D resources are far inferior compared to the bigger players. It took someone like Samsung - with their giant R&D - to push the envelope regarding mirrorless action shooting (and then they quit, since the camera industry wasn't attractive enough for ongoing investments). Now Sony is trying to catch up. But Canikon has been in this field for ages. And AF and action shooting/long lens shooting are the key advantages that DSLRs still hold over mirrorless cameras.
Without small form factor/portability, what is the reason to even go for small sensor camera system, especially when one is paying significant $$? Like $ 2000 for a camera body? Unless you are locked into that system? Let me know one reason please?  And do let me know how you can get the same image quality or subject isolation - with same field of view - that one can get with a D810 + 400mm f/2.8, or a 600mm f/4, or even a D500 + 200-500mm f/5.6. Or re landscapes - a 14-24mm f/2.8 - that field of view and image quality. Or for portraits, something equivalent to a 85mm f/1.4 or f/1.2. And now a 105mm f/1.4.
I follow R&D and improvements in AF performance closely. Whether mirrorless or DSLR. Canon or Nikon. Sony or Olympus. That's an area of interest, since I shoot wildlife. But tell me, if you have only driven a car till 80kmph (analogy -shooting single shots), you wouldn't even know how another car can perform at 150kmph. That is the difference between single shot shooting and servo/continuous shooting in burst mode, when trying to track a subject.
Last edited by nilanjanray : 8th November 2016 at 00:30.
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