ddrueding
Fixture
Interesting e_dawg, thanks for compiling the list.
Olympus total: 5,404
Nikon total: 202,757
Canon total: 291,790
Olympus total: 5,404
Nikon total: 202,757
Canon total: 291,790
I can't believe Canon is not bending over backwards to rectify the situation quickly and thoroughly.
Link please tannin, to internal documents that prove this cost??? I'm calling BS, make them in the same numbers as a Rebel and the cost premium would be less than the difference between the original 'dumbed' down 300D and the 10D.I imagine a 5D would be perfect for it.)
And stop grumbling about the price. Do you know what full size sensors cost to make? It's heaps!
That Olympus seems rather inexpensive, so is the cost really a major issue? I'm curious what the market niche of the Olympus and miniature sensor are compared to a body with a larger small sensor, such as a D80 or similar?
It is not surprising that the pro cameras are less popular on the "flickr". I don't see any D2H or D2HS listed at all, and the proportion of 1D/1D MK II/1D MK IIn is quite low. The users are out probably out shooting games or events and selling the images elsewhere than on the "flickr". Where are the MFs with digital backs?
It is the other way around. Canon has the customer bent over all right.
BTW, as I've said it before, I guess none of you ever owned/used -except maybe old fart LM, but I'm sure he never gave it a chance when he could lug around "2 ton" (how is that a corrollary to the 'miniature' reference ) tanks- you're all clueless as to what ergonomics is until you've used an Oly OM-1 or OM-2, they wrote the book on ergonmics with that camera, and there is no good reason a FF digital sensor could not be engineered to fit into that FF 35mm camera body style. As I've already said in a prior post, ergonomics on the 5D as well as the 30D just blow. The full size pro bodies are way, way, way too big. Leica M series digi rangefinder rocks!
It is not surprising that the pro cameras are less popular on the "flickr". I don't see any D2H or D2HS listed at all, and the proportion of 1D/1D MK II/1D MK IIn is quite low. The users are out probably out shooting games or events and selling the images elsewhere than on the "flickr". Where are the MFs with digital backs?
Not a single 5D, FF sensor digicams must really blow, or they are TOO expensive for anyone but a pro!
Link please tannin, to internal documents that prove this cost??? I'm calling BS, make them in the same numbers as a Rebel and the cost premium would be less than the difference between the original 'dumbed' down 300D and the 10D.
Interesting e_dawg, thanks for compiling the list.
Olympus total: 5,404
Nikon total: 202,757
Canon total: 291,790
Where did you get these numbers dd? The Nikon and Canon totals seem really high!
I had an R1800 a few years ago but did not like the compromise of gamut and super gloss vs. accuracy all that much. Of course it depends on the subjects and your areas of interest. I prefer the R2400/3800/4800/7800 K3 inkset which is more traditional like the old SP2200, rather than the R800/R1800 inkset which is more along the lines of the old 1280/1290.
This is a question that I am interested in as well. My longest lens at present is 55mm, so something must be done.So what is really the difference between 200mm and 300mm?
I wanted more zoom (can't seem to ever get enough right?). I was taking pictures of Liam at soccer and even though I was right on the boundary of the field I couldn't really zoom in on him. I took lots of group shots that maybe I could crop but weren't that good anyway (handheld with no VR).
I thought the 70-300mm would give me that zoom.
So what is really the difference between 200mm and 300mm?
I'd probably prefer the 18-200mm because I'd get VR with my indoor no flash shots and it would be a single lens.
dd, if you don't need 300 mm of reach, the Canon 70-200/4L is a fantastic semi-pro lens that is reasonably fast, but still compact and light enough compared to the f/2.8 beasts
Thanks for the detailed comments e_dawg. I'm quite curious about the Olympus system. That 12-60 f/2.8-3.5 looks like a phenomenally useful lens --I'd love to hear your comments on it once you've had a chance to use it for a bit.
I guess I just need to see the pictures... off to go read some reviews.
Whoops, should clarify that if I had a Canon body, the 70-200/4L *IS* USM would be at the top of my list for a tele zoom.
So what is really the difference between 200mm and 300mm?
Do you have one, or just talking?
Trying to figure a way to quantify this for myself as well. Here is what I came up with. Calculations are at full-frame, because my math skills suck.
200/300/600mm lens = 12/8.2/4.1 degree diagonal angle of view
At 50 yards, the field of view is 10/7.1/3.6 yards diagonal.
An object 6' tall fills the frame at 41/59/84 feet.
Here's a 100% crop of the top left corner of the frame for the 18-200/VR... JPEG out of the camera, cropped, then 20% USM at radius 7
1/400 sec, f/7.1, ISO 100, contrast -1, JPEG basic, no-resize, 20% USM
Notice the blur, lack of contrast, and the chromatic aberration? And this image has already been sharpened a bit.
Why spend $650 at the low-end for a new lenses if you are not sure what reach you will be wanting?