Most people prefer the black, and the camera's competitors at this
level are all black: Nikon, Olympus, Nikon, Minolta... All pro
cameras are black.
Define "Most".
Only guessing here, but I strongly suspect that 60% or more
prospective buyers of a professional or semi-professional camera
would say that it looks better in black than silver. Yes, I'm just
talking out of my a*
. You want to conduct a formal, large-scale,
scientific, double-blinded survey and subject it to peer review?
That's sort of my point

I don't conduct formal, large-scale, scientific market surveys. However, I'm sure Canon dedicates a department of resources to do it - and maybe, just maybe, they know that more people want silver than black.
I think there's a difference between smart and sleazy. Smart is
designing and engineering a brilliant product that proves highly
successful and appealing.
And expensive. Nothing in this world is free, even if you didn't
pay for it.
Some companies innovate, and some companies manipulate.
Apple innovates. Microsoft manipulates.
Microsoft is more profitable. Apple is more admirable.
And the scale is (from most desirable to least desirable)
1. A company which is both admirable and profitable
2. A company which is only profitable
3. A company which is only admirable
4. A company which is neither admirable nor profitable
Only a handful of companies can achieve #1, and Apple is one of them.
Microsoft falls into #2 which is not too bad.
However, given that all companies must obey the laws, if there's a conflict between being admirable and being profitable, profitable comes first, except that not being admirable will make you not profitable in a longer run, then you may want to be in #3 instead of #2.
It all depends on what a company has to do in order to survive.
The amount of technical brilliance you saw in the past few years
attributed to the fact that digicams were still maturing. Right
now we're seeing more evolutionary changes than revolutionary
changes. It doesn't mean the engineers are not working hard
anymore.
True. But when it becomes harder to push the envelopw, I would hope
Canon would address some of the many "do-able" things we've been
requesting before resorting to deceptive and manipulative marketing
tactics to push us to be stuff we wouldn't otherwise want.
All marketing tactisc are manipulative, or maybe "deceptive" in some's eyes - it tries to manipulate public perception. I have to emphasize - it is NOT WRONG as long as a "balance" is achieved: at what point are the manipulations considered "overdone"?
NO company can push a person to buy anything he doesn't want unless the customer decides that he actually wants it. Sure, some will regret the purchase after buying, but it is the buyer's fault not the seller's - he/she should havfe done enough research by himself before buying. It is not like the company keeps the specs all secret.
Just vote with your wallet and pick another brand, like how a market economy should work.
I'm sure you have done the calculations to know what amounts to
your "tiny bit". Wait...maybe it's just a guess.
It's a simple matter of adding a little memory chip and/or
processor to process the video as fast as the memory card can store
it.
If this is so difficult or expensive, how come Olympus, Sony, and
others seem to have miraculously overcome this "huge" challenge?
Read the reviews all over the Internet. How come the Canon cams
consistently get good reviews and the same is not true for Olympus, Sony and others? Probably because:
1. They cut corners in some other areas in order to save cost.
2. They add the cost to the camera, you just don't notice it because of #1.
Again, it is just your personal preference. A lot of people prefer
to operate their cameras with two hands, even if they can do it
with one.
The difference is that the G3 can be operated with one OR two hands
- so the user has a choice. Not so with the Pro1.
Point taken.
However, don't you notice that the G6/Pro1 also give you a grip which makes it more difficult to shake the camera when you release the shutter? Weight is a good thing and a bad thing at the same time.
It is again, "balance". There is no perfect design. Decisions must be made in order to find a good compromise. Improve in one area, hurts another. It is the universal truth of all designs.
Let's say, if they add 5 more custom modes and increase the price
by $50, will you accept it?
How much memory do you think it takes to store a custom setting?
Probably a few hundred bytes at most. Olympus and Nikon have more
custom settings and they cost LESS.
Again, they cut cost in other areas. You'll find something that are on the Canons and not on Nikons and Olympi as well.
If they had a G6, in black, and they eliminated the shutter speed
limit, the movie clip limit, increased to 8 custom settings,
preserved an ergonomic design and weight distribution to allow
one-handed operation, and incorporated some sort of useful
Sony-esque AF system, I'd pay $1000 for the camera.
Write it down. I'm sure you'll find it somewhere after Photokina 2004, Canon or not.
This camera should have been out a year ago.
It all depends on availability of 7MP Sony sensors. Not all components in Canon cams are made by Canon.
Again, don't limit yourself to a single brand. You'll find what you want.