All things considered, Canon is coming under a lot of pressure to advance their sensors. This is great for US!
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neuroanatomist said:JohanCruyff said:jrista said:jdavis37 said:Anyhow, good news is the competition is good for all of us and hopefully these companies wil continue building tools that we can enjoy. Here is a good article about the D750 written by Thom Hogan:
http://www.dslrbodies.com/newsviews/d750-too-little-too-late.html
I though Hogan's article was good, and pointed out some of the flaws I see in Nikon's product naming and marketing strategy. It's schizophrenic, haphazard...sometimes just weird. But, I think Tom missed one thing: Many D750 buyers will simply be D700 owners looking for an upgrade. He couldn't seem to find a position for the D750...I think a key part of it's position is the logical upgrade for D700 owners.
As far as I know, many Nikonians don't consider the D750 the real successor of their beloved D700: it's more a kind of "D620".
Which is not necessarily a bad thing, IMO.
Possibly jrista was taken in by the name of the D750 as a successor to the D700 (I was, at first). Hogan's view that the D750 isn't a D700 successor is echoed by the Nikon shooters I've spoken with – including several pros using D700 bodies.
Their complaints included things like the D750's lack of a PC sync port (means needing to buy hotshoe RF flash triggers, bummer Nikon lacks Canon's -RT flash system), the lesser build quality, the 'consumer' remote port (not sure if there's a functional difference, or it's like Canon's -E3 vs -N1 plugs and means currently owned remotes aren't compatible). They weren't really bothered by the drop from 8 to 6.5 fps. The general feel was that the D750 was a consumer camera, not a pro camera. One commented (a little bitterly) that maybe Nikon thought including a Full Auto (green-square) mode made up for dropping the pro features...
janmaxim said:Is it only me? Or am I the only one prefering the SOOC pictures in the review compared to the post processed ones?
janmaxim said:Is it only me? Or am I the only one prefering the SOOC pictures in the review compared to the post processed ones?
jrista said:neuroanatomist said:pdirestajr said:Until I can look through a Nikon viewfinder and change ISO settings with my right index while also adjusting any other setting I need, I'm sticking with Canon.
Haven't you heard? With a Nikon camera, you don't need to change ISO – just set ISO 100 and you're done. In post you can push it to ISO 3200, with a SoNikon sensor that's easy-peasy and the IQ is still better than Canon. Or so I've read somewhere or other... :![]()
You make fun of it...but it's possible. Because there is practically no read noise, digitally lifting ISO 100 to ISO 1600 or 3200 is effectively the same thing as actually using those ISOs (with the added benefit of having massively more dynamic range).
Steve said:janmaxim said:Is it only me? Or am I the only one prefering the SOOC pictures in the review compared to the post processed ones?
You may not be alone but you'd still be wrong. The lifted photos look much better...
Steve said:Its utterly amazing to me that all of you are falling all over yourselves to say how worthless better sensors are when you all know full well you'd be crowing from the rooftops if this was a review of the 5DIV.
If that 5 stop pushed photo comparison were flipped and the 5D3 shot looked like the D750 shot and vice versa, none of you would be saying "yeah, well I don't need all that DR, harumph". You'd be laughing at Sony/Nikon and calling them garbage sensors. The amount of denial on this forum is insane.
Those Exmor sensors are clearly better and in a way that would be extremely useful in a variety of shooting situations.
One last question: for those of you who think that the Sony sensor advantages are completely unnecessary - an opinion I have seen expressed over and over and over -
janmaxim said:Is it only me? Or am I the only one prefering the SOOC pictures in the review compared to the post processed ones?
9VIII said:janmaxim said:Is it only me? Or am I the only one prefering the SOOC pictures in the review compared to the post processed ones?
Not just you, that immediately stuck out to me.
The more I look at high profile wedding photographers the more I want to shoot my own wedding (don't ask how).
Steve said:Its utterly amazing to me that all of you are falling all over yourselves to say how worthless better sensors are when you all know full well you'd be crowing from the rooftops if this was a review of the 5DIV. If that 5 stop pushed photo comparison were flipped and the 5D3 shot looked like the D750 shot and vice versa, none of you would be saying "yeah, well I don't need all that DR, harumph". You'd be laughing at Sony/Nikon and calling them garbage sensors. The amount of denial on this forum is insane.
jrista said:When you nail all of those other factors. And, it's more than possible to nail every one with any pro- or semipro-grade DSLR from Canon or Nikon (and some even from Sony, and probably Pentax as well). We already have cameras with phenomenal AF systems, with very high frame rates (although the best frame rates do tend to cost), and composition is a simple matter of preference...reframe to taste. When you get all that right, what's left?Sensor IQIs the picture interesting?
jrista said:I know Sarangiman would probably disagree.
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They only lack in one primary area...fundamental image quality
Sporgon said:jrista said:They only lack in one primary area...fundamental image quality
Fundamental. Do you know what that means ? How can you say that in the face of all the superb quality imagery produced on Canon sensors they have a fundamental problem with image quality ?
jrista said:Kahuna said:jrista said:neuroanatomist said:pdirestajr said:Until I can look through a Nikon viewfinder and change ISO settings with my right index while also adjusting any other setting I need, I'm sticking with Canon.
Haven't you heard? With a Nikon camera, you don't need to change ISO – just set ISO 100 and you're done. In post you can push it to ISO 3200, with a SoNikon sensor that's easy-peasy and the IQ is still better than Canon. Or so I've read somewhere or other... :![]()
You make fun of it...but it's possible. Because there is practically no read noise, digitally lifting ISO 100 to ISO 1600 or 3200 is effectively the same thing as actually using those ISOs (with the added benefit of having massively more dynamic range).
Jon, I hope you are wrong. Serious, whats left when you have eliminated the science and have dug deeply into the art of photography....Composition?! Not really a concern on these massive megapixel cameras....
As Ron Popeil stated - Set It and Forget It -
Sorry, not sure I understand... You hope I'm wrong about what? ???
Composition is obviously important. Getting good focus is obviously important. Getting the right frame is obviously important. I'm not saying they are not, no one who appreciates more DR is.
But here is my stance on the issue. When you nail all of those other factors. And, it's more than possible to nail every one with any pro- or semipro-grade DSLR from Canon or Nikon (and some even from Sony, and probably Pentax as well). We already have cameras with phenomenal AF systems, with very high frame rates (although the best frame rates do tend to cost), and composition is a simple matter of preference...reframe to taste. When you get all that right, what's left? Sensor IQ.
I already have awesome AF. I already have a great frame rate (7D) and a good frame rate (5D III, the 1D X is out of my acceptable range of cost). I already know how to get good composition. When it comes to landscapes, a lot of it is simply a waiting game...waiting for the right light, the right weather, and being at the right place in time to get the shot. When all that comes together...the only thing I don't have, is the best sensor IQ money can buy.
It's not a complicated equation. 8)
cap7ainclu7ch said:Wouldn't this sort of sensor be incredibly helpful for sports/action? Being able to bring up my sports pictures in post without degrading the image would be extremely useful for maintaining high shutter speeds and lower ISO's. It seems like the images hold up way better than my 5D3 shooting at a high ISO.
jrista said:The stuff Ross Harvy produces? That's art. It may be his job, but it's also his art.