No.
This week I used a 7d for the first time, mostly as a video camera to get into tight places the RED would not fit.
I also used a 5d2 for the first time as a still camera, to shoot some prop photographs for the video we are working on.
My conclusion is they are both wonderful machines that do everything that you could ask, exactly when asked, are easy, fast, compact, inexpensive and have all the tactile feel and romance of a hair dryer.
I'm not nostalgic for old cameras, will never go back to film, but in shooting the video we also used an old hasselblad 500 with a polaroid back as a prop camera. It is the 180 opposite of the Canons. It doesn't do everything you want, just changing the F stop and shutter requires more than a millesecond, maybe a few seconds, heck if it sticks sometimes a few minutes. The viewfinder is beautiful but somewhat dark, the ergonomics of a box camera are not that good, but when you focus and push the button you feel like you've done something human, with a device made by a human.
If medium format missed the boat on any one thing, it's the fact they never produced a real full frame 2 1/4 square sensor, which sounds kind of strange considering I've only shot about 2 dozen square images in my life. Well more than that but only seen about 2 dozen square images I've shot run in my life.
I think a lot of this comes down to what you want to be. Some people just love the instantness of a dslr, the got it now I can leave the room function it serves, but I just can't help but think something is missing in the 5d/7d/d whatever process.
I know, it's all about the final image, but if anyone can tell me the process doesn't matter, then I think they've played one too many ninetindo games.
But I'll tell you something funny. This week were shooting with this, which is far from intuitive, far from instant:
Around the set are all kinds of cameras, Nikons, the 5d/7d's and of course twenty two million I phones. But the camera everyone picks up, actors, assistants, gaffers, grips, the sound guys, EVERYONE picks up is the Leica M-8.
So draw your own conclusions about image quality, what is good or not good, but don't tell me that if you love photography the process doesn't matter.
IMO
BC