Re: Bill Claff Chimes In
AlanF said:
bclaff said:
FWIW, I don't find the results particularly surprising...
Bill
Thanks for chiming in - your site is very useful and informative. I have learned something from this paragraph: reading out noise from the 1DXII is fundamentally greater than that from the 5DIV because the fps increase is greater than the decrease in the number of pixels (2x0.7 greater transfer rate)...
...Contributions from a real expert are always welcome on this site, and I hope you will contribute further.
I would echo those thanks. For one thing, it is helpful to put findings into context. Unfortunately, what you get on the Internet is people who have an agenda posting and distributing information with no context or with misleading context.
As a person who uses a camera to help earn my living, but who has no background or interest in testing sensors or any other component of cameras, I generally look for some very broad takeaways when reading reviews and going to testing sites: is the aspect being tested relevant to my use and if so, do the results demonstrate differences that I am likely to notice in my shooting?
About 99% of the time, the answer to one or both questions is "no."
I appreciate people like Bill (along with Lens Rentals, DPR, DXO, The Digital Picture, etc.) who take their roles seriously and really do care about these things. They provide information that I can factor in when making a purchase decision. But, I think it is ultimately the responsibility of the consumer to keep everything in perspective.
My initial take on this "controversy" was that people were taking an anthill (it doesn't even qualify as a molehill) and transforming it into a mountain. Nothing that has been written changes that opinion. If I were in the market for the 6DII (I'm not and never have been) and desired it strongly enough to consider a pre-order, I find nothing in this discussion that should dissuade anyone from completing that pre-order. Indeed, to be blunt about it, the only rationale I can see for people to be upset would be if one's own personal sense of worth were tied too closely to the idea that one must have the newest and shiniest toy on the block.