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Frequent Member
Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
Last edited by BenBotha; 20-07-2012 at 02:47 PM.
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Frequent Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
My immediate reaction was Yawn. Another mirrorless camera with interchangeable lenses and (from the looks of things) a large sensor. Then it struck me that this is probably what a mirrorless camera with interchangeable lenses and a large sensor should look like. It has the two key advantages of a camera system - interchangeable lenses and a flash shoe, with the feel of a point and shoot.
Updated on canonrumors.com with this picture. A 22mm f2 pancake would be a great place to start with a system like this.

A 22mm f2 pancake is a great idea as a kit lens for this.
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Frequent Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
Specs:
- APS-C CMOS sensor 18 million pixels
- The image processing engine DIGIC5
- Hybrid CMOS AF in combination with phase-contrast
- Video Servo AF, Servo AF, AF touch
- The range is equivalent ISO 25600 ISO100-12800, in the expansion
- To 30 seconds shutter speed is 1/4000, bulb, flash sync is 1/200 sec
- Second continuous shooting speed is 4.3 frames /
- 1.04 million dot LCD monitor 3.0-type wide, touch panel
- The media SD / SDHC / SDXC (corresponding UHS-I)
- Video is 1920×1080 30p/25p/24p, 1280×720 60p/50p, 640×480 30p/25p
Method – video compression MPEG-4 AVC/H.264, audio Linear PCM, MOV format
- Available in over 60 species of EF lens mount adapter EF-EOS M
- Hand-held Twilight mode synthesized by the continuous shooting at a shutter speed four with less camera shake
- HDR mode to synthesize three different exposure
- Multi-shot noise reduction function to reduce the noise by combining the four images
- Creative filters
- The size is x 66.5mm (width) 108.6mm (height) x 32.3mm (depth)
- The weight (body only) 262g, (including battery and memory card) 298g
- Kit lens EF-M22mm STM, EF-M18-55mm IS STM
- Comes with a mount adapter and EF-EOS M 90EX Speedlite kit of some
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New Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
The specs are making me think that hardware wise this is identical to the 650D minus the SLR, pop-up flash and change in lens mount.
- Image sensor looks the same (18MP with hybrid AF)
- Same Digic5 image processor
- Identical LCD touch screen? (1.04MP 3inch touch screen)
- Identical ISO ranges
- Nearly identical shutter speeds 1/4000s to 30s instead of 60s and same flash sync 1/200s
- Identical media type support
- Identical video capabilities
- Same multi-shot noise reduction mode
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Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
When the mirrorless cameras 1st came out I suddenly felt that DSLR cameras were becoming old hat. It seems to me that to have the whole finicky mirror mechanism in a modern world a bit archaic. This set me wondering about newer camera trends that are changing from mechanical systems to more digitally driven designs. The old film SLR's dictated the tried and tested mirror systems as only way to go when digital cameras made their debut. But now newer technology can achieve higher framerates, shutterspeeds without the hindrance of mechanics.
Take the "Black Magic Design" cinematic video camera for instance, without a viewfinder. Why would they risk designing something like that for their first camera release? Canon's 1st mirror less "Canon EOS M" is almost identical to my Canon 60D in half the size and I can use my EF lenses.
Only time will tell, watch this spot
Last edited by Digital Guy; 26-07-2012 at 03:51 PM.
Reason: duplicated text
"There are always two people in every picture the photographer and the viewer." - Master Ansel.
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Frequent Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
 Originally Posted by Digital Guy
When the mirrorless cameras 1st came out I suddenly felt that DSLR cameras were becoming old hat. It seems to me that to have the whole finicky mirror mechanism in a modern world a bit archaic. This set me wondering about newer camera trends that are changing from mechanical systems to more digitally driven designs. The old film SLR's dictated the tried and tested mirror systems as only way to go when digital cameras made their debut. But now newer technology can achieve higher framerates, shutterspeeds without the hindrance of mechanics.
Take the "Black Magic Design" cinematic video camera for instance, without a viewfinder. Why would they risk designing something like that for their first camera release? Canon's 1st mirror less "Canon EOS M" is almost identical to my Canon 60D in half the size and I can use my EF lenses.
Only time will tell, watch this spot
When the mirrorless cameras 1st came out I suddenly felt that DSLR cameras were becoming old hat. It seems to me that to have the whole finicky mirror mechanism in a modern world a bit archaic. This set me wondering about newer camera trends that are changing from mechanical systems to more digitally driven designs. The old film SLR's dictated the tried and tested mirror systems as only way to go when digital cameras made their debut. But now newer technology can achieve higher framerates, shutterspeeds without the hinderance of mechanics.
Take the "Black Magic Design" cinematic video camera for instance, without a viewfinder. Why would they risk designing something like that for their first camera release? Canon's 1st mirror less "Canon EOS M" is almost identical to my Canon 60D in half the size and I can use my EF lenses.
Is everyone else also seeing double? or have my bifocals gone on the blink
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Member
Re: Canon mirrorless camera-Picture
Focus man focus.
"There are always two people in every picture the photographer and the viewer." - Master Ansel.
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