For the sake of readability and having everything together in a one thread - one topic sort of way, I'll quote some some 1D III posts from the other thread:
mubs
News.com has a write-up about the new Canon EOS-1D Mark III.
LunarMist
Yeah, most of us were up late last night waiting for the official announcement and reading the white paper, etc. The 1D MK III is a terrible disappointment for people like me, still waiting for the 1Ds MK II's replacement.
Handruin
What points specifically made it a terrible disappointment? Was it the mild change sensor size among other things? I can't say the $4k price tag is worth what it offers. I'd also like to see what the top of the line brings in for the 1Ds MK II's replacement.
LunarMist
I'm not a PJ or sports photog, nor do I need to shoot in caves. Canon still has nothing to compare to the linear density of the D2X and no decent long zoom like the 200-400VR. At least if new Canon had 12MP at 8FPS, or better yet 14MP at 7 FPS, it would be of some use. Of course that would not allow for the higher ISOs.
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Taking the points in order, why is Lunar "terribly dissapointed"?
Well, mostly because of what Canon
didn't do, rather than anything they
did do - specifically, they didn't announce a IDs III. So it looks like it will be autumn before he gets what he is waiting for.
In the meantime, the ID III, as he notes, won't really provide anything he hasn't already got (at least, nothing relevant to his needs).
Doug's disappointment is harder to fathom. I agree that 10MP in a 1.3 sensor seems modest (I'd have guessed 12MP myself) but I imagine that they wouldn't have gone that way if they hadn't been sure that achieving the same speed and noise performance in a smaller pixel pitch wasn't going to be possible.
I'm not sure how much the speed will matter. There are certainly times when the 5 FPS of the 20D isn't really enough (birds in flight, mainly - there is no such thing as too much speed for flight shots), but whether 10 FPS as against 8.5 FPS would be a worthwhile difference, I'm not sure.
I'll drop in resolution slightly (assuming a given distance from a small subject, such as a bird). On the other hand, you have to set several advantages against that
- autofocus speed
- autofocus accuracy
- lower noise per pixel
- as a result of the lower noise, ability to shhot at higher ISOs, which translates into faster shutter speeds
- greater accuracy per pixel (because the pixels are bigger, we are further away from the other limiting factors, such as difraction at both lens and sensor levels)
- better controls = fewer mistakes = better pictures
That seems to add up to a winning combination, at least for what I do. The real question is should I buy a 1D III now, or wait and get a 1Ds III in spring (southern hemisphere spring, that is) - ..... or get a 1Ds II now? I'm leaning in the 1D III direction, but want to think it through more carefully first. In any case, it will be a month or two before they have stock, so I can afford to ponder a bit longer.