ConstantProduction wrote: If you look at the DSLR magic lantern hack, those cameras should not be able to produce those RAW images, but the hardware is enough for it, so not being able to enable high speed on this current tech is absolutely something that might be done.
You do realise Canon have a very good reason for encouraging ML. It adds features to their cameras at no cost to them. THe level of QA it has to pass is lower to, so less stability is accepted.
It also allows the hardware to be pushed further than safety limits allow. One of the main reasons for restricting performance is to keep the failure rate down. Hell there are entire lines of products that are effectively built form high end parts that failed QA (but only by certain amounts) and were restricted in a lower end product. The Scarlet is exibit A here, its basically an Epic that boards werent quite up to snuff.
In short a hack in certain cases is benificial to a company, it can add things outside the operating margins of the hardware without any risk to their bottom line through warrenty obligations. (Canon's warrenty policy on ML ispretty much that ML only invalidates warrenties if it can be tracesd as the cause, the raw hack caused them specifically to exclude sensor overheating damage while ML was running.)