swishbrade
New Member
Be patient. Announcement on 18-Sep. Canon is rather confident they will shake Nikon to the roots with this release.
Don't hold back doodah. Tell us everything you know! Thanks for sharing.
Be patient. Announcement on 18-Sep. Canon is rather confident they will shake Nikon to the roots with this release.
http://asia.cnet.com/crave/2008/09/05/new-canon-dslr-due-end-of-september/We have word from Canon that it will be unveiling a new dSLR later this month. While the company didn't indicate which unit it will be, it did mention to us that it will replace a "long overdue model". We suspect that the new camera is the much anticipated successor to the EOS 5D launched 3 years ago.
It is rumored online that this dSLR will feature a 21-megapixel sensor and, like Nikon's D90, will be able to capture HD-quality movies. However, given that Canon is concentrating more on quality than cramming features into a camera, this is highly unlikely.
We were also told that this camera will be very exciting, and can possibly trump other shooters in its class easily. This will mean it has to go against Nikon's D700 and maybe Sony's rumored full-frame dSLR.
Check back with us soon as Photokina draws near. We believe Canon will make the announcement then.
Seems like quite a substantial report, and possibly the most solid rumour so far...saw the whole translation over at dpreview forums.
So, to those hankering after "affordable" FF (like me), if the 5D MkII is REALLY 21MP, would you get it? For me I might think twice...coz as hobbyist, do we really need such a huge filesize/resolution? The 15MP of 50D actually would be better and more preferable. (or even the 12MP of the old 5D).
Perhaps I might just wait awhile more for a good deal on a used 5D....
Just my random thots while we wait impatiently for Canon to end this super long waiting saga.
Cool....thanks for sharing! This is the first time a credible source has divulged that Canon openly acknowledged the new DSLR (highly likely to be 5D replacement). Now we just have to wait and see!! :thumbsup:
I feel Canon might not even announce 7D or 5D replacement, it might just release another video DSLR to play catch up to Nikon D90. Face it, a full frame mega-pixel giant semi-pro system is not going to generate alot of income to Canon. Moreover, Nikon have shown that it's not the megapixel that will make the picture sharp.
Firstly, products cannot be churned out overnight. The Nikon D90 was announced ~ a week ago. Do you think Canon can come up with a new sensor that outputs video and put out a new camera in one month's time just to compete?
Secondly, megapixels do make pictures sharper as long as you are comparing on the SAME SIZE (PRINT) SCALE. Try scaling the pathetic 12 MP FF to (the new Sony) 25 MP FF.
Thirdly, Sony is putting out the 25 MP A900. And Nikon will soon follow with an update on the D3. I challenge you to reiterate what you just said when the D3 update is released.
Fourthly, it is a myth to associate poor high ISO noise performance with increase pixel count. If that is indeed true, the pathetic 6 MP D70 will have better high ISO performance than the 10 MP D80, and the 12 MP D90 will be the worst. But the truth is just the opposite.
Fifthly, as photographers, you should stop analyzing noise performance at 100% pixel level. Compare at the IMAGE level.
Sixthly, one can always pretend that diffraction effects due to small apertures does not exist by using a low pixel count sensor. BUT the reality is that the phenomenon has ALREADY happened at the lens aperture blades (when closed down substantially) and the sensor only serves to record that reality. If you still prefer not to acknolwedge the truth, you can always down scale your 50 MP image to 6 MP and everything will be tack sharp. But this reminds me of an ostrich that buries its head in the sand in the face of danger.
what is the hype abt 21mp. it"s not like we use anything more than 10mp when we print.
This will have to come from both the camera and the lens. Canon will need to revamp some of their older lenses in order to take advantage of the high MP.However, don't mind it if there is more, the advantage is the absolute image sharpness and detail rendition, and the ability to crop in more if necessary.
The downside of such high resolving sensor is that you will need equally high resolving glass to get optimal image sharpness/details. Even L zooms might start to show their limitations, especially for the wides. Possibly more of the new 5DII owners would have to resort to switching their lens lineup to higher end L primes to squeeze the maximum quality out of that 21MP sensor. So you end up spending more moolah on quality glass (which is what Canon wants too lol)However, don't mind it if there is more, the advantage is the absolute image sharpness and detail rendition, and the ability to crop in more if necessary.
The downside of such high resolving sensor is that you will need equally high resolving glass to get optimal image sharpness/details. Even L zooms might start to show their limitations, especially for the wides. Possibly more of the new 5DII owners would have to resort to switching their lens lineup to higher end L primes to squeeze the maximum quality out of that 21MP sensor. So you end up spending more moolah on quality glass (which is what Canon wants too lol)
how many MPs does the 7D have?:think:
The downside of such high resolving sensor is that you will need equally high resolving glass to get optimal image sharpness/details. Even L zooms might start to show their limitations, especially for the wides. Possibly more of the new 5DII owners would have to resort to switching their lens lineup to higher end L primes to squeeze the maximum quality out of that 21MP sensor. So you end up spending more moolah on quality glass (which is what Canon wants too lol)