Personally, I think if you plan to sell away your camera in the future when you're upgrading to a better camera, I would go for Canon as I believed that it has a better resale value.
Really ah ? like Toyota cars versus Continental resale value ?

Personally, I think if you plan to sell away your camera in the future when you're upgrading to a better camera, I would go for Canon as I believed that it has a better resale value.
Hey,
y not try the image quality between the 2 brands and also if your comfortable to which machine. One price One quality, there is always a reason for this statement.
Some baised to Sony, while others may be Canon or Nikon..thus thru here is a mixture of information which tends to create confusion.
Im a Canon user....no worries.
Canon - trusted by the professionals
Cheers!!
One way to choose is to analyze the conclusion - cons from dpreview.
how about the company background & experience on DSLR technologies between Canon and Sony.
LOL Dpreview is very known to be biased.![]()
Hi, 550 (new)($1120) has latest technologies & 10-22mm($1100) is great for landscape.
Personally, I think if you plan to sell away your camera in the future when you're upgrading to a better camera, I would go for Canon as I believed that it has a better resale value.
LOL Dpreview is very known to be biased.![]()
How so? (sorry TS, a quick question.)
Which company are they biased towards?
I have to say technology wise, the major camera manufacturers are all at par. Some models will exhibit certain slight weakness or strengths, but all in all, most of the users will seldom (or never) notice the difference. Whether your pictures will come out good (more than performance) will depend on your composition, understanding of the particular camera and your technique.
That said, what you need to look at is:
1. Whether the feature set of the specific camera meets your needs.
2. Which user interface you like more.
3. What is your roadmap? If you are planning to get only a few of simple lenses for the next 2 years, Going with any system will pretty much be the same. All brands offer the standard lenses like: standard zoom (like 18-55), telezoom (55-200), 50mm prime, Ultrawide. There are also many very capable and popular 3rd party lenses (Tokina, Tamron, Sigma) available for most mounts.
4. Whether you like the feel of the camera.
And nothing beats going into a store and have a feel of the cameras. You are not going to get too far asking in the forum.
I have to say technology wise, the major camera manufacturers are all at par. Some models will exhibit certain slight weakness or strengths, but all in all, most of the users will seldom (or never) notice the difference. Whether your pictures will come out good (more than performance) will depend on your composition, understanding of the particular camera and your technique.
That said, what you need to look at is:
1. Whether the feature set of the specific camera meets your needs.
2. Which user interface you like more.
3. What is your roadmap? If you are planning to get only a few of simple lenses for the next 2 years, Going with any system will pretty much be the same. All brands offer the standard lenses like: standard zoom (like 18-55), telezoom (55-200), 50mm prime, Ultrawide. There are also many very capable and popular 3rd party lenses (Tokina, Tamron, Sigma) available for most mounts.
4. Whether you like the feel of the camera.
And nothing beats going into a store and have a feel of the cameras. You are not going to get too far asking in the forum.
Thanks to all seniors providing such valuable tips! I'll be heading down to Expo tonight to choose my camera..
Can't wait to own mine!!! :bsmilie:
how about the company background & experience on DSLR technologies between Canon and Sony.