I was reading a post here, "how far would you walk with a FF.... etc"
I was interested in a reply on the forum, I hope I have not taken it out of context, apologies if I have.
"AJOHNW
Basically I feel that crops of 1.5 are out and full frame is still in. ".
I find it interesting that there is a belief that FF is the way to go, or that it is in some way better or superior to cropped sensors, wrong.
When photography was in it's "heyday" so to speak, 15", 10" plates were THE way of Photography, as we moved on Medium format was and perhaps is still considered the standard format especially for studio, it was only really during the war that film was so hard to get that enterprising photographers realised that 35mm "cine" film could be adapted and used in "small format" cameras, (Oskar Barnack, who was in charge of research and development at Leitz, decided to investigate using 35 mm cine film for still cameras)
see link and google others
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_camera
Now we have (skipped much and many years) crop sensors and more, but the ALL have their own, unique and very important place in photography.
FF is NOT the be all and end all in photography, I spend most of my time with sports photographers, nature and wildlife photographers and most are shooting crop, why because they offer the extra reach with tele/zoom lenses. Take the 7D, D300s for example, used the world over by pros and photographers in daily life, I chose to shoot crop for reasons, I could buy a couple of FFs tomorrow, I neither want nor need them, let alone "aspire" to them.
In reality there is no "standard" format, what there is, is a format that suits YOU, whether it is MF, FF, Crop or 4/3 or smaller, it is what best suits your needs and requirements.
My advice is, not to fall into the trap of believing that one is better than another, it is not, decide what you want to shoot, decide on the best system for you, and work with that.