jrista said:Lee Jay said:bchernicoff said:DPAF in the 70D has two photosites for each pixel. I'm really surprised that no one has suggested that "fine detail" is a selectable mode that reads each photosite separately to produce a 40mp image.
If they're both under the same microlens (which is how DPAF works), you wouldn't get any more detail that way.
Totally agree. There is no benefit to splitting the photodiode underneath the same microlens and color filter.
Lee Jay said:jrista said:Lee Jay said:bchernicoff said:DPAF in the 70D has two photosites for each pixel. I'm really surprised that no one has suggested that "fine detail" is a selectable mode that reads each photosite separately to produce a 40mp image.
If they're both under the same microlens (which is how DPAF works), you wouldn't get any more detail that way.
Totally agree. There is no benefit to splitting the photodiode underneath the same microlens and color filter.
Well, except fot the phase information, which is the whole point of them doing it.
jrista said:LOL, I'm not advocating soft images.
jrista said:Lightmaster said:i know.... but what has QE to do with sensor size when the G10 has a reported QE of 57% ?
http://www.sensorgen.info/CanonPowershot_G10.html
or the G15 with QE 59%
It doesn't have anything to do with sensor size. Canon's smaller sensors are manufactured on their newer fabs, which do use a 180nm process and apparently better materials. It's the larger sensors that are still manufactured at their older fabs.
MichaelHodges said:jrista said:LOL, I'm not advocating soft images.
It sure sounded like it.You blamed waxy AA filters on end users, and then brushed the waxy filters off by saying you can sharpen soft images.
jrista said:MichaelHodges said:jrista said:Also worried about the "fine detail"...I really don't want them to start removing AA filters. That is just a dumb trend that photographers like simply because they do not understand the value of an AA filter, or the ease by which AA softening can be sharpened.
Any soft image can be sharpened. But the images that are sharpest in RAW without sharpening are going to take post processing much better.
I'm actually kind of shocked to see someone on a camera forum advocating soft images.
The 7D was the softest Canon DSLR I've owned (and I've owned a bunch). So any move away from that buttery, waxy look is progress.
LOL, I'm not advocating soft images. People just plain and simply don't understand resolution. I want OVERSAMPLING, not soft images. An oversampled image is only a problem if you pixel peep. However, nicely oversampled image (say 2-3x the diffraction spot size) is never going to need any upsampling for printing large. You don't have "sharp" detail when upsampling ANYWAY, so I'd much rather start out with an image that has as much detail as possible, even if it looks "soft" at 100%...it's going to be less soft than a lower resolution image that's been upsampled to the same size.
Going in the other direction, you can always downsample an oversampled image and gain sharpness. An image oversampled 2x relative to an image that was not oversampled at all (1x) will look better when downsampled to 1/4 it's original size to match the 1x image. Additionally, the oversampled image won't have any aliasing of any kind whatsoever, where as the image sampled at 1x WILL most definitely have aliasing and possibly moire.
Removal of an AA filter also means that signal frequencies that match the sensor frequency, and those just above and just below, the frequencies that get aliased most, just end up becoming noise. But it's a harsh, sharp noise, so it's very obvious.
There are no real benefits to removal of AA filters. With the right kind of scene, say a landscape packed with non-patterned information, MIGHT benefit from it. However there are plenty of very undesirable things that absolutely do occur with the removal of AA filters...proven things, most of which have no real solution for correcting in post. I'm advocating against Canon following the uneducated trend of niche companies like Nikon and photographers who don't know what they are talking about, and forcing the introduction of a crap ton of artifacts and aliasing into our images that were perfectly fine before.
Lightmaster said:jrista said:MichaelHodges said:jrista said:Also worried about the "fine detail"...I really don't want them to start removing AA filters. That is just a dumb trend that photographers like simply because they do not understand the value of an AA filter, or the ease by which AA softening can be sharpened.
Any soft image can be sharpened. But the images that are sharpest in RAW without sharpening are going to take post processing much better.
I'm actually kind of shocked to see someone on a camera forum advocating soft images.
The 7D was the softest Canon DSLR I've owned (and I've owned a bunch). So any move away from that buttery, waxy look is progress.
LOL, I'm not advocating soft images. People just plain and simply don't understand resolution. I want OVERSAMPLING, not soft images. An oversampled image is only a problem if you pixel peep. However, nicely oversampled image (say 2-3x the diffraction spot size) is never going to need any upsampling for printing large. You don't have "sharp" detail when upsampling ANYWAY, so I'd much rather start out with an image that has as much detail as possible, even if it looks "soft" at 100%...it's going to be less soft than a lower resolution image that's been upsampled to the same size.
Going in the other direction, you can always downsample an oversampled image and gain sharpness. An image oversampled 2x relative to an image that was not oversampled at all (1x) will look better when downsampled to 1/4 it's original size to match the 1x image. Additionally, the oversampled image won't have any aliasing of any kind whatsoever, where as the image sampled at 1x WILL most definitely have aliasing and possibly moire.
Removal of an AA filter also means that signal frequencies that match the sensor frequency, and those just above and just below, the frequencies that get aliased most, just end up becoming noise. But it's a harsh, sharp noise, so it's very obvious.
There are no real benefits to removal of AA filters. With the right kind of scene, say a landscape packed with non-patterned information, MIGHT benefit from it. However there are plenty of very undesirable things that absolutely do occur with the removal of AA filters...proven things, most of which have no real solution for correcting in post. I'm advocating against Canon following the uneducated trend of niche companies like Nikon and photographers who don't know what they are talking about, and forcing the introduction of a crap ton of artifacts and aliasing into our images that were perfectly fine before.
another thing people forget is that "sharpeness" does not equal "more details".
jrista said:MichaelHodges said:jrista said:LOL, I'm not advocating soft images.
It sure sounded like it.You blamed waxy AA filters on end users, and then brushed the waxy filters off by saying you can sharpen soft images.
What in the world are you talking about?
Also worried about the "fine detail"...I really don't want them to start removing AA filters. That is just a dumb trend that photographers like simply because they do not understand the value of an AA filter, or the ease by which AA softening can be sharpened.
jrista said:I was not really interested in the 7D II being a big video DSLR anyway...I don't really know that anyone truly was, you just don't get that cinematic look with a smaller sensor...not without having very wide apertures anyway (like a lot of expensive cinema lenses do).
PureClassA said:In the previous chain about the 7DX specs better DR, IQ, and less noise are the overwhelming drivers for interest here...But I'm not convinced Canon could make such a miscalculation.
Lightmaster said:LetTheRightLensIn said:MichaelHodges said:jrista said:Also worried about the "fine detail"...I really don't want them to start removing AA filters. That is just a dumb trend that photographers like simply because they do not understand the value of an AA filter, or the ease by which AA softening can be sharpened.
Any soft image can be sharpened. But the images that are sharpest in RAW without sharpening are going to take post processing much better.
I'm actually kind of shocked to see someone on a camera forum advocating soft images.
I'm not. He is advocating against messed up aliased images, not for soft images.
I hope Canon just get suckered into the Nikon/SONY fake hype over AA-less sensors.
i have to say the 810 images look not bad.
im not a nikon expert but i read the camera has no AA filter.
Yep, honest truth is that Canon has lost the low-budget indie video world a good 2+ years ago. Panasonic, BlackMagic, etc took it over, and I dont think Canon can realistically get it back. 1080/60 is something cameras had years ago, and unless the DPAF turns it into camcorder level AF, it wont win a lot of people.roxics said:There isn't a ton of hype about the 7DmkII in the video world, only because most people have given up on Canon outside of Magic Lantern hacks. But the hope is still that Canon will release the 7DmkII to match or at least come cose to the GH4 in video specs.
jrista said:The convolution caused by an AA filter is highly predictable and uniform across the frame, so it's easily correctable. Aliasing, moire, and other artifacts that occur due to the LACK of an AA filter are near impossible or literally impossible to correct in post, even with the most advanced tools on the market today.
MichaelHodges said:Lee Jay said:Do you think camera makers put in those horribly expensive AA filters because they want to increase their expenses and reduce image quality? They're there for a reason - to reduce aliasing, which is a totally impossible to remove artifact once it has been sampled into the raw data.
It's about finding a balance between preventing aliasing and preserving fine detail. The 7D I owned for years delivered waxy images. My 70D is a significant upgrade in this regard.
This "fine detail" sensor looks like an acknowledgement of the mushy 7D files. That's good news.
roxics said:jrista said:I was not really interested in the 7D II being a big video DSLR anyway...I don't really know that anyone truly was, you just don't get that cinematic look with a smaller sensor...not without having very wide apertures anyway (like a lot of expensive cinema lenses do).
You're kidding right? Do you know how much hype there was in the video world over the original 7D? It was huge! The APS-C sensor is nearly super35mm in size, the same size as motion picture 35mm film. It matches cinema lenses well, unlike full frame cameras.
There isn't a ton of hype about the 7DmkII in the video world, only because most people have given up on Canon outside of Magic Lantern hacks. But the hope is still that Canon will release the 7DmkII to match or at least come cose to the GH4 in video specs.
MichaelHodges said:Lee Jay said:Do you think camera makers put in those horribly expensive AA filters because they want to increase their expenses and reduce image quality? They're there for a reason - to reduce aliasing, which is a totally impossible to remove artifact once it has been sampled into the raw data.
It's about finding a balance between preventing aliasing and preserving fine detail. The 7D I owned for years delivered waxy images. My 70D is a significant upgrade in this regard.
This "fine detail" sensor looks like an acknowledgement of the mushy 7D files. That's good news.
LetTheRightLensIn said:It seems like Canon marketing at work again when it comes to 4k. The 1DC can do a full read and extract and process 4k out of 18MP using dual digic 5 so why could the 7D2 not handle a 4k read out of a 20MP sensor with dual digic 6? Now they are locked into their top sports/wildlife mini-cam not being able to shoot wildlife video at 4k for another 3-6 years....