Smartphones May Soon Shrink The Digital Camera Market In Half By 2021
Face off: You (we) have witness
what smartphone made so many gadgets outdated today. Not surprisingly, the
worldwide popularity of handsets has affected the digital camera market, and
according to the CEO of Canon, the situation is going to get a lot worse over
the next couple of years.
"People usually shoot with smartphones. The digital camera market will keep falling for about two years, but professional and [advanced] amateurs use about 5 to 6 million units. Finally [the market] will hit the bottom," he said.
Speaking to the Nikkei (via
Mirrorless Rumors) Fujio Mitarai, boss of the Japanese giant, warned that the
digital camera industry would keep declining. He said that by around 2021, it
will have reached its lowest point, having shrunk by almost 50 percent.
While more traditional camera companies are turning to full-frame mirrorless
products, Mitarai says these are simply replacing DSLRs, rather than expanding
the industry and attracting new digital camera users.
"In our company cameras have declined at around 10% a year in the past few years. The world market for interchangeable lens cameras is around 10 million. The mirrorless product is growing, but it is a replacement [for] single lens reflex, it is not adding to the market as a whole," he explained.
To try and compensate for this
market decline, Canon plans to focus on its corporate and industrial customers
in fields such as surveillance and medical care.
Smartphones have made a number of
things almost obsolete. Simple calculators, maps, digital music players, voice
recorders, alarm clocks, answer machines, payphones, etc. have all been
affected to varying degrees. But while professionals and enthusiasts are likely
always to want high-end digital cameras, the effect phones are having on the
industry can’t be underestimated.
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