Most of this debate is pointless in my opinion to the original post. Fine, Everyone has there favorites we got that. The bottom line is between the models listed the 50D would probably be the best option and best bang for the buck right now. It offers quality, though not up to the 7D does a good job and provides build and speed the T2I (550D) can not. With the coming of the D60 the prices will drop big, making it a great starter camera. Yes, both the 7D and the T2I are amazing cameras, the 50D is the happy middle ground between them.
^This.
I just like to jump on Derrel because he doesn't seem able to pass up an attempt to continue his "I hate high MP cameras" and "The 50D and 7D suck!" campaigns. And rather than offer some constructive information to the thread (like... I don't know, suggesting a camera?) he just continues his random, skewed attacks against Canon, the 50D, and the 7D.
I'll personally apologize for Derrel and his complete obsession with making sure everyone in the world knows how terrible Canon high MP cameras are based on one arguably bias article. (Here's one that takes those same attributes into consideration, but presents it in a way that doesn't sound like radical damnation.)
I'll also apologize for continuing this joke of an argument with Derrel. It's clear that he has his opinions, and anyone who thinks otherwise is wrong. The 50D is a terrible, terrible piece of trash camera that no one should ever buy. The 7D is even worse. I mean look at all those pixels! Awful camera. Everyone should buy a 6 year old 20D.*
*To the original poster, this is satirical mockery. Right now is probably the best time to get the 50D, as prices are dropping like crazy in preparation for the new 60D. Despite what a single biased article may lead you to believe, it's actually a pretty good camera and will fit many needs at a great price. I've owned one for over a year and a half and have used it for lots of things from air shows to football games to model shoots. I was very pleased with the images I was able to get. And in the end, thats's all that matters right? :thumbup:
Well, Matt, you're a young, inexperience shooter, who doesn;t own a full-frame camera, and who simply isn't technically-minded enough to know and understand why excess pixel density HURTS overall,total,system performance. I can understand that you want to defend yor 50D and your 7D...you have a lot of your "ego" tied up in them.
Unfortunately my good young man, you simply do not have the basis for comparison that older, more affluent and more dedicated shooters have. Like, for example, let's read about your perfect 7D and how it stacks up against FULL-frame sensors...shall we?
Rob Galbraith DPI: Canon announces 17.92 million image pixel, 8fps EOS 7D
"What the pictures look like is perhaps easier to digest. So far, the photos we've taken with a beta 7D look a lot like they've come from a 50D, except with 2.9 million additional pixels of resolution. Canon appears to have done a masterful job of wringing out every ounce of quality from the 7D's little pixels (smaller than any Canon before), resulting in photos that are fairly crisp, reasonably clean and usable up to about ISO 1600.
Noise, when it appears, has a natural graininess to it, up until about ISO 1600 as well. At ISO 3200 and beyond you'll run into increasingly unmanageable amounts of digital dandruff (white pixels spread throughout darker areas) and plugged shadows. At all ISO increments, other than the very lowest ones, pictures can take on a somewhat harsh, chunky appearance not present in larger-pixel cameras in Canon's lineup, such as the EOS-1D Mark III. Or Nikon's D3 and D700.
Correcting for digital dandruff requires image detail to be softened, sometimes considerably, while the slight harshness is simply a trait to be lived with.
This means that overall, 7D image quality is shaping up to be decent, though not groundbreaking. If you're coming from a 50D or Rebel T1i, you're likely to be right at home with the picture quality from this camera. If you're coming from a camera like the 5D Mark II, the 7D's pictures will almost certainly seem inferior, in some instances by a fair margin."
End quote. Sorry Matt...there are many people out there besides you, with more experience than you, and a better basis from which to judge. I liken you to the Japanese import car owner who cannot believe for a second that his brand and model isn't the best-ever! I see your posts all over this board, trying to defend your 50D and 7D purchases, as if they somehow reflect on you, personally. Give it a rest. Do the math. Bigger is better. Maybe if you had a FF camera, you'd know what you were talking about WRT to performance of FF and lower-density sensors and modern lenses. As a 40-year PJ and pro sports shooter and digital learning instructor says, "if you're coming from a camera like the 5D Mark II, the 7D's pictures will almost certainly seem inferior, in some instances by a fair margin."
As to the OP,who seems to have disappeared into the ether: just purchase a d-slr. For your first one, you just need to BUY one. Any one. I smell a trollish absence of the OP...