After the 1100d and the 600d, I've upgraded to a third DSLR. Choose between 60d and 7d. The numbers 60d and 600d are essentially interchangeable. The 7 is a terrific camera, but it is a bit antiquated (there are no newfangled stuff), and while it lies more solidly in the hand than the 70d, the joysticks on the 70d seem to be more user-friendly. The answer to that question is that I now have 70d instead of 600d. 1 - Built-in lens adjustment! It has a straightforward configuration and can store up to 40 lenses' serial numbers in its memory at once. 2 - A physically matrix that has been slightly expanded, resulting in a significantly different picture in terms of dynamic range, sharpness, and noise reduction! By the way, with regard to noise, 800 is quite close to the limit on an older camera; but, on a Canon EOS 70D, 1600 is perfectly OK; 3200 is a setting from which you can get a decent photo; and closer to 6400, the image is comparable to what you would get with a Canon EOS 600D set to ISO 800. 3 - Management. Everything is really different over here. The first time I held it in my hands, I had no idea where to prod and turn it. I was completely confused. After holding the camera steady in my hands for half an hour, I came to the conclusion that everything is where it should be, and the control evokes a great deal of satisfaction and satisfaction. At 600 d, and then again after six months, I glanced to see where each button is located; at 70 d, within a week, I control everything fully blind. 4. A large number of fine adjustments, which were severely lacking in the 600d (a wide choice of image formats, including three distinct raw formats and a variety of jpegs from which you can select any combination; a lot of fine adjustments) WB selection determined by temperature; ISO in 1/3-step increments; 19 focus points; special pre-installation manual mode; switching to video with a separate toggle switch; the mode selection wheel spins in a circle with a protective lock button, etc., you won't remember everything!) I enumerated twenty percent of the benefits of seventy pence rather than six hundred pence. In general, I have to say that I think this is one of the greatest crop cameras that Canon has to offer right now. Do not compare it to the 7dm2 because the scope is different, and if you do not have a sports report from the past, it is already better to take the FF 6d for that sort of money. The next stage will already be just FF, but I have a feeling that a camera with such capabilities will not become bored for a very long time and will delight with stunning photographs.
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