1 - It probably won't help either way. It's already well known that Canon beats Sony at high ISO (outside of pay-per-point dxo scam scores). The only "backside illumination" that matters is the Sony zealots thinking the Sun shines out of Sony's rear end! ;D ;Dbdunbar79 said:I have an on-topic question regarding this camera. Well, two questions:
1. Will the back-illumination only really help at high ISO?
2. Why can't mirrorless camera designers improve AF precision and accuracy to the level of say, the 5D3 or 1Dx?
Thanks.
2 - Because it's a flawed dead end technology. No serious photographer is going to want to stare at a tiny TV screen stuffed inside a camera instead of seeing the real world through a proper optical viewfinder. Image sensors are just bad at autofocus because they're meant to take pictures, not determine focus. If you want functional and reliable autofocus you need a dedicated autofocus sensor, like a DSLR has.
Mirrorless cameras are so ridiculously bad at autofocus it's funny. Any less light than midday in the sahara desert and you might as well spin the focus ring and hope for the best. It really is that bad.
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