I have to agree with you.Compare the specs of the D600 and a99. The a99 is in a different class. If sharing the same sensor makes the a99 overpriced, then so is the Canon 7D when compared to every other canon aps-c camera. By the same measure, the D7000 should cost about £350, to compete with the a37.
gadgeteer said:Is the A99 in a different class than the D600? On paper yes. In practice I think the difference is not big. Is the A99 better specced than the D800? No way.
I'm not dissing the A99 as a camera. It's great. I just think the price point is wrong. If they can sort it out, I could be seriously tempted to switch back to Sony since I love their SLT technology.
People use tilting screens to compare these days? Really?
actually once you get used to it...you can't go back to a fixed one. especially the one on my a77 is a dream to use
Cagey75 said:People use tilting screens to compare these days? Really?
Chobber said:Just bought Sony A99 and Zeiss 2470 lens yesterday. Upgraded from my A77.
What a camera! the performance is insane. I can shoot at 6400 ISO without worrying and the speed of the AF is unlike anything i have seen. Very pleased.![]()
Kirk Tuck seems to like his - he's talking about buying a 2nd.
Somebody got a bargain on Sony's outlet store the other day - an A99 refurb for £1600.
No, I didn't say that they had to. Some people (landscape, product photography etc.) would be happy with the higher MP sensor but don't care about the fps & buffer.Because you said they need to fit a new brain, different sensor and increase storage, theres not much else to change after that.
actually some would - whether it's a big enough market to justify the marketing & stock keeping is another question.If the Sony users arent buying the A99 they arent going to buy a camera thats almost the same but costs an extra £500+.
Johnd2000 said:According to the rumour mill, there's a new firmware version coming out tomorrow. It adds AF-D support for most of the missing lenses.