j-nord said:Sure, you will have people at every extreme from super high res pixel peepers to people who are happy to view pixelated, stretched out images. My question to you is, how long before tablets are 4K? 5 years? Less? 2k images are fine when a standard viewing device is 2k. When standards change, so will a lot of photographers. I'd also like to think that people who have several thousand $ invested in camera gear and a lot of time invested in photography, care how their images are viewed/consumed/shared.scyrene said:Well fineI guess the way we share photos is just very different, I didn't even consider that. I still think you're being optimistic as to how high most people's standards are regarding what is acceptable cropping. Remember, you said "for a lot of people" - this I disagree on. I think most people's standards are lower than those of many of us here in these forums - clearly we are the kind of people who pay more attention to technical minutiae. Most people just take pics and view or share them and that's it.
(PS - doesn't viewing from a greater distance diminish the effect of more detail? A computer display is viewed fairly close, but tvs and projected images tend to be much further away. Just a thought).
Things are changing, absolutely. It's gradual, and everybody's thresholds are different. But with higher resolution displays, higher resolution images will be more important, I agree. Although I guess we'll start hitting the wall of what people can perceive. I've never seen a 4K tablet, but at 10" size, say, is it noticeably different from HD? At what point do the pixels become too small to see the difference at average viewing distances?
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