And that's where being a decade-long digital-only shooter and being a decades-long film and digital shooter gives you a different view. Camera gear and technology is always turning over. Nothing ever stays the same in the hardware landscape, and digital has merely accelerated the process. View cameras gave way to rangefinders and TLRs which gave way to SLRs which gave way to dSLRs, which may now be giving way to mirrorless (but note, there are still folks out there shooting with view cameras, rangefinders, TLRs and film SLRs). And mirrorless will not be the "permanent" solution, either, as something else may come along to replace it.
Photography, unlike most of the other arts is technology dependent. And technology never stands still.
Maybe not wrong. Just working in a different frame of context, now. When you started out getting your gear, there probably were no mirrorless cameras to consider. I know I was aiming for full frame, because I shot film for 20+ years, and my XT, much as I loved it, felt like having tunnel vision.Is it time to conclude that I may be wrong ?
And it doesn't have to be "or"--it can be "and". I shoot a 50D (birding), a 5DMkII (landscapes/product/portraits) and a micro four-thirds G3 (most everything). Mirrorless is not a complete replacement for dSLRs, although they can be depending on what you shoot and what lenses you favor. But the systems are still young, and not as mature as dSLR gear; fast-action capability is not as good, and 3rd party support is nowhere near as broad or deep.
Yup. While it's not my 5DMkII, my cheapie little G3 comes close enough for me, that it's become my main camera for the convenience of the size/weight. I'm willing to put up with 2x crop limits and lower-than-a-dRebel handling for what I'm getting and how little I'm lugging about with me (my bag is 5lbs, with the G3 and five lenses in it. And 2.3 lbs of that is the bag.)Mirrorless cameras imply less weight and volume for the equipment, and this is something to consider. Quality is supposed to be better on the DSLRs but I guess that the gap between both type of cameras is going down and down....
G3+Olympus 9-18:
Only you can answer this. As I said, I held onto my Canon gear and just added mft to the bag. And while I'm thinking of selling the Canon gear my mft setup can replace, eliminating completely for me is still out of the question for me.Most mirrorless cameras are not FF and now we come back to the origin of this thread: does it make sense to go to a mirrorless camera ? This is a key decision for me because it brings me to a new approach to photography...