Why the Canon EOS 650 was the iPhone moment for cameras

Thirty-five years ago today, the Canon EOS 650 arrived and changed the face of photography. It was Canon's first ever EOS camera, and while it might not look like a relative of the iPhone, it has a surprising amount in common with Apple's game-changer. Like the iPhone, it was a bold break from the past whose new twist on existing tech took its industry into a new era.

To really understand how important the EOS 650 was, we need to travel back to March 2, 1987. Interestingly, on the exact same day, Apple was preparing to reveal the Macintosh II, while later that year Nokia would introduce its first handheld phone, the Cityman 1320. But the camera world was also in the midst of a tech revolution.

(Image credit: Canon)

Like phones and capacitive touchscreens in 2007, cameras in the mid-80s were dabbling with an exciting new tech called ‘autofocus'. Leica got the ball rolling in the late 1970s, but Minolta shocked the photography world by launching the first SLR with in-body autofocus (the 7000AF) in 1985. 

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