With so few buttons only a touchscreen can save this camera.
On a plus side it seems quite robust and I think it may be the best looking no-viewfinder mirrorless to date.
The only thing that interests me now is the lenses. Canon has the capacity to deliver a good line-up beating easily the Sony NEX system and competing with the mFT (in this case with the possibility of having a larger sensor).
Mescalamba wrote:
Tho no EVF = not good/really bad.
yeah, agreed
really seems like canon and nikon are just trying to recoup the p&s sales lost to cell phones with these cameras. convince people they still need to carry around a camera to take good photos...
which is all well and good, but it's not terribly satisfying to photographers who are looking for DSLR alternatives
I'm glad I just upgraded from the NEX 5N to the 7. I was afraid I might regret not waiting to see what Canon launched. They had a huge opportunity to launch a mirrorless Canonet line. That could have been a direct X-Pro1 killer. I guess they're content to simply be a me too player here.
Yes, my comments are probably premature but on looks alone, it's not too exciting.
Sr.Cordeiro wrote:
The only thing that interests me now is the lenses. Canon has the capacity to deliver a good line-up beating easily the Sony NEX system and competing with the mFT (in this case with the possibility of having a larger sensor).
yeah, i think they can really deliver the goods with some tiny, high quality lenses.
i mean can't they just make this same camera with an EVF, aperture ring, shutter speed dial and a freakin' exposure compensation dial?
The more I look at the mount size vs. the sensor size, I'm not sure the sensor is aps-c, unless the mount is large compared to Nex. Plus, making 35/2 equivalent that small would be quite an achievement. It kinda looks to me like we have yet another mirrorless format size.
The general public doesn't mind not having a viewfinder so this model is certainly entry-level, but the general public also prefer a zoom lens to a prime, so I'm a bit confused.
To have a new lens mount implies a certain degree of commitment so I guess we can expected to see more advanced bodies in the future.
goosemang wrote:
i mean can't they just make this same camera with an EVF, aperture ring, shutter speed dial and a freakin' exposure compensation dial?
Of course they can. I would suspect that they might introduce a higher end camera later on. The Sony Nex 7 wasn't introduced at the initial launch of the Nex system.
Sr.Cordeiro wrote:
The general public doesn't mind not having a viewfinder so this model is certainly entry-level, but the general public also prefer a zoom lens to a prime, so I'm a bit confused.
yeah, rolling it out with a 35mm f/2 equivalent certainly seems to be aimed at folks who are more than just taking snapshots
Sr.Cordeiro wrote:
The general public doesn't mind not having a viewfinder so this model is certainly entry-level, but the general public also prefer a zoom lens to a prime, so I'm a bit confused.
To have a new lens mount implies a certain degree of commitment so I guess we can expected to see more advanced bodies in the future.
The 22mm is a macro, great thing for versatility.
I'm actually kind of curious to see how large a zoom lens is on this system. The vast majority of general public from what I've seen just has the kit zoom lens as their only lens.
The lack of a viewfinder is a fail right out of the box for me personally. If Canon wanted an upgraded P&S OK, but they already have that in more then several existing forms. Any serious camera meant to target their large base of DSLR users has got to have a viewfinder, and not a bolt on either. It would seem that Canon can never give us anything new anymore, it's always technology that others have tried and has already been out in the field for years, just that it now carries a Canon logo. Disappointing to me personally.