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<blockquote data-quote="Vincent" data-source="post: 342203" data-attributes="member: 15675"><p>Glenn, I thought that the purpose of the thread was that you tried to see what would be needed for Nikon to win commercially.</p><p>I based myself on Nikonrumors as you might have noticed for the names, nothing but rumors. specifications are completely made up.</p><p>However it seems logical that there are these 2 models: D300s replacement and competitor for 1200D (since low market is selling well an you will need to make margin there). (All the rest has been done? except the D7200, but I find that early for Nikon)</p><p></p><p>I actually wanted to review my D9300 prediction:</p><p>The sony A7s technology would be to early for Nikon it seems to me, so let me take the D810 technology and slimming it down to APS-C, it would give a 14 MegaPixel sensor, DXO Mark 14.8 Evs Dynamic Range and 2853 ISO; that would suddenly change the APS-C market.</p><p>I checked the pixel pitch for this, but if you have the same pixels on a smaller surface the sensor sensitivity should not fundamentally change.</p><p></p><p></p><p></p><p>I guess you have an Ericsson phone, a Nokia phone or a Motorola? If you do not defend your position aggressively in the current economy you get taken over by Sony, Microsoft or Google. Some want Nikon to decide how to create the next innovations in photography not Canon, not Sony, Microsoft or Google. Did you see on Flickr that the most used camera is the i-phone, followed by Canon/Niikon and then Samsung Galaxy.</p><p>There are real marketing issues in the war against smart phones, but even in the ILC market (DSLR or MILC), Canon remains the competitor to beat.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Vincent, post: 342203, member: 15675"] Glenn, I thought that the purpose of the thread was that you tried to see what would be needed for Nikon to win commercially. I based myself on Nikonrumors as you might have noticed for the names, nothing but rumors. specifications are completely made up. However it seems logical that there are these 2 models: D300s replacement and competitor for 1200D (since low market is selling well an you will need to make margin there). (All the rest has been done? except the D7200, but I find that early for Nikon) I actually wanted to review my D9300 prediction: The sony A7s technology would be to early for Nikon it seems to me, so let me take the D810 technology and slimming it down to APS-C, it would give a 14 MegaPixel sensor, DXO Mark 14.8 Evs Dynamic Range and 2853 ISO; that would suddenly change the APS-C market. I checked the pixel pitch for this, but if you have the same pixels on a smaller surface the sensor sensitivity should not fundamentally change. I guess you have an Ericsson phone, a Nokia phone or a Motorola? If you do not defend your position aggressively in the current economy you get taken over by Sony, Microsoft or Google. Some want Nikon to decide how to create the next innovations in photography not Canon, not Sony, Microsoft or Google. Did you see on Flickr that the most used camera is the i-phone, followed by Canon/Niikon and then Samsung Galaxy. There are real marketing issues in the war against smart phones, but even in the ILC market (DSLR or MILC), Canon remains the competitor to beat. [/QUOTE]
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