LetTheRightLensIn said:
jrista said:
I do not believe I have made the mistake of confusing resolution with DR. I've never made any such argument. The point I have been trying to make is that the DR gain indicated by Print DR is explicitly dependent upon a TRADE for something else, in this case detail. The net result is really nil, as your potentially gaining more DR (at least DR as DXO defines it), at the loss of potentially significant amounts of detail. My argument has been that DXO does not make this fact clear in the way they score cameras, which is rather misleading.
That seems like a sudden change in tune. For the last six months you were saying that the PrintDR plots were garbage and that the only true way to compare cameras relative to one another was using the ScreenDR numbers.... and that you didn't believe in the Print normalization whatsoever and it was others who pointed out the tradeoffs that you now claim you were claiming all along. But whatever, if you are finally on board, then about time. ;D
My argument has always been that you cannot realize a beneficial improvement in DR when you downscale, at least by the definition of DR that I was using. I freely admit I'm not generally very eloquent in my wording my arguments, and I am trying to be clearer and more specific. According to elflord's explanation, where black point (and this S/N zero) shift closer to pure black when you average noise. That description of DR, from a purely theoretical standpoint, while I'm willing to accept it as the math DXO uses to produce their specific numbers, does not actually describe the kind of dynamic range explained by TheSuede in his reply to me just a few posts above. Theoretically it's sound...in the pure, ideal environment it is described within. I believe there are extenuating circumstances that are not generally factored into that neat and tidy theory. I could reiterate them, but I've done that so much, if you want to know my stance on any particular argument, just reread my posts.
Just as I have always been arguing, Screen DR really actually tells you about THE HARDWARE. Print DR is more like SQF, a normative but otherwise subjective (as it needs to be) mechanism by which to compare IMAGES, or more specifically the amount of noise present in an image and the resultant S/N when noise frequencies are normalized, produced by cameras on a level playing field. I understand the purpose of normalizing images to put NOISE into the same frequency. I also understand the purpose of normalizing images for the sole, pure purpose of producing a workable model within which to score sensors on that same level playing field. But there are scores, and then there are realities...
I refuse to accept that any movement in the black point results in anything useful, as in, an increased ability to recover detail. The simple act of averaging
cost you a
significant amount of detail (in the case of the D800, by a factor of 4.5). Additionally, the kind of leeway we are all familiar with when it comes to RAW exposure latitude is reduced by orders of magnitude once you convert to RGB (namely, the brightest highlights and deepest shadows are relatively rigid and do not have much leeway to be adjusted...they are essentially as "baked in" as noise; push them too far, and you either clip or block, and end up with muddy gray/brown lifted shadows or dull/grayish sorta-highlights.) So assuming you wanted to try and recover those deeper shadows with a TIFF, you might be able to recover a little, but nowhere near the four to six stops you might with an original, and thus unscaled, RAW. I consider the normalization of noise to be an entirely different concept for an entirely different purpose than dynamic range...always have. This whole argument hinges on what DXO is describing with the terms "Print DR" and "Landscape Score". Referring to the change as a useful improvement in dynamic range, that should thus give you the ability to recover
even more detail from shadows that would otherwise be even deeper into noise than you could recover before is simply not true. The information buried that deeply into the noise floor is well and truly gone, it cannot be recovered by any means. All you can do is make noise darker by averaging, but that further destroys USEFUL detail, and simply makes the detail that was already consumed by noise (as well as the noise itself) a deeper shade of black. It does not make it any more usable, useful, or "recoverable".
If the mathematical definition of DXO's Print DR simply refers to the normalization of noise, which thereby concurrently reduces detail as it reduces the noise floor (black point, S/N 0db), so be it. But I do not believe that is how most people "grasp" the concept of dynamic range, hence the complaint about misleading scores, numbers, and terminology, hence the general confusion about what, exactly, DXO's "Landscape" score really actually means, frustration and anger that the "Landscape" score carries so much weight in DXO's model, etc. Now, I am happy to accept that it's DXO's to decide how they weight and distribute points among their own scoring model. It's just that there are reasons, valid reasons IMO, for why people have a hard time with DXO's scores. I've tried to put a logical voice to those reasons.
I
am trying to be more clear about my position in this grand debate. I'm trying to refine my stance, based on a clearer understanding of the stance of opposing parties, so we all know where everyone stands.