pizzahut88
Well-known
Canon had full-frame for a quite some time.
The 5D is still perhaps the cheapest full frame out there.
Nikon now has D3.
Now Sony is entering the race:
http://www.sony.co.jp/SonyInfo/News/Press/200801/08-010/index.html
Now let's hope Sony sell their sensors to Carl Zeiss.
perhaps we will have full frame digital Zeiss Ikon.
Or perhaps Epson will re-enter the RF market and go make a full frame RF?
Epson shocked us before!!!! Who would have guessed they would make the first digital RF in the world?
Everybody said it's not possible.
I am not a engineer, but if I am you would surely know what I would try to make.
And everyone here would be terribly delighted.
What we have here is a proliferation of full frame sensors.
Times have changed.
There is no way in the world Leica could continue without one anymore.
Seasoned RF users would understand why the absence of the full frame rangefinders. But the lack of it would be hard to attract new RF users, especially when they have full frame sensors.
The 5D is still perhaps the cheapest full frame out there.
Nikon now has D3.
Now Sony is entering the race:

http://www.sony.co.jp/SonyInfo/News/Press/200801/08-010/index.html
Now let's hope Sony sell their sensors to Carl Zeiss.
perhaps we will have full frame digital Zeiss Ikon.
Or perhaps Epson will re-enter the RF market and go make a full frame RF?
Epson shocked us before!!!! Who would have guessed they would make the first digital RF in the world?
Everybody said it's not possible.
I am not a engineer, but if I am you would surely know what I would try to make.
And everyone here would be terribly delighted.
What we have here is a proliferation of full frame sensors.
Times have changed.
There is no way in the world Leica could continue without one anymore.
Seasoned RF users would understand why the absence of the full frame rangefinders. But the lack of it would be hard to attract new RF users, especially when they have full frame sensors.