Honestly I had a Canon and hated it 60D. Id get 30 pictures out of battery if I was lucky. I decided to save up and buy a Nikon D7100. Its a worlds difference. It all comes down to wether you want a professional style camera or something for the holidays and vacations.
How long did you look at the LCD screen before and after each shot? :lmao:
I shoot primarily with a Canon 7D and get something like 2000 photos out of a battery maybe more, maybe less, it all depends on if you use the LCD screen a lot. I have been shooting canon since 1999 and would not use anything else. I have had several friends convert from Nikon to Canon because the interface and CMOS sensors in Canon give better color and usability. So much so that Nikon abandoned their old sensors and went to what Canon uses. Canon really is the best option out their, look at professional events and photographers 99% of them use Canon and with good reason.
I know tech has changed (and quickly) and there are some people that will argue for the side of Nikon, whether it be personal preference or other. I don't really come from a consumers point of view when it comes to photography tech, I don't use auto functions and never really have, I seldom use the LCD screen, except checking exposures in the histogram. So although I can say that Canon has the photographic market cornered I say it from a professional point of view.
As for the 60D and 70D, I honestly have not looked at the 70 yet, but looked over the specs and some reviews on the 60D a couple of months ago and was impressed with most of the specs.
As for what the body is made out of, as long as it isn't glass I wouldn't put to much weight into it. Look at weather sealing, frame rates, ISO abilities, memory card selections, sensor resolution, shooting modes and ease of function.
Depending on what you want to do with the camera, you maybe better off with a point and shoot. But if a DSLR is really what you need, more importantly then the camera is the glass you use. That is the primary influence on the quality of your photos. 'If you buy cheap lenses you get cheap photos".
Oh and don't worry about having a 20 megapixel camera or something ridiculous like that. If your not planning on making billboard size prints 8MP is plenty, assuming they even make cameras with that small amount anymore. :ror: