hpjfromdk said:If you're not fluent in Japanese the US patent app with same priority is US20130082343A1
~ hans ~
And here I thought that fluency in Japanese was a prerequisite for all CR members......
Upvote
0
hpjfromdk said:If you're not fluent in Japanese the US patent app with same priority is US20130082343A1
~ hans ~
RGF said:Years ago introduced technology on a one off basis. For example eye control went no where,
Caps18 said:You will need a new type of monitor to really use it the way it could possibly be made. Imagine no pixels, no 'resolution', just a standard size that everything is scaled to. It might be vector-based with infinite resolution if the picture is digitally made. Or if it captured with this type of Foveon sensor, it will have to use some math processing to figure out what color to put where.
paul13walnut5 said:RGF said:Years ago introduced technology on a one off basis. For example eye control went no where,
Eye Control was on the A2E (5), 50e, 30e and 30v, and the 3, and one of the APS EOS cameras (as in APS film) It was sold on cameras between 1992-2007 (the latest the EOS 3 was listed as a current model by canon, the most recent new model to feature ECF was the 30v, launched in 2004) so it was far from a one off basis.
Widely revered, widely derided. It's hard to think of a more devisive feature amongst Canon users of a certain generation. I loved it and wish they would bring it back. It had an off switch. I never use spot average flash metering, but I don't get upset by cameras having it.
ankorwatt said:ecka said:Foveon rocks! ;D
FF+Foveon=FFF
FFF+mirrorless=me happy![]()
foveon dont rock, if so there have been a good foveon sensor out by now with good high iso properties and easy to to convert to color true pictures with out tons of mathematical calculations.
se my earlier answer:
a Foveon solution with different layers is not a good solution, there are already other solutions tested, a single cell with prismatic properties that divides the RGB to surfaces that are equal and not stratified
ankorwatt said:ecka said:ankorwatt said:ecka said:Foveon rocks! ;D
FF+Foveon=FFF
FFF+mirrorless=me happy![]()
foveon dont rock, if so there have been a good foveon sensor out by now with good high iso properties and easy to to convert to color true pictures with out tons of mathematical calculations.
se my earlier answer:
a Foveon solution with different layers is not a good solution, there are already other solutions tested, a single cell with prismatic properties that divides the RGB to surfaces that are equal and not stratified
Foveon is NOT about high ISO.
Leica is NOT about high ISO.
Medium format is NOT about high ISO.
Why so many people are going crazy about high ISO? I understand that it's useful, specially when you are shooting for money and you need to deliver. I'm not a pro, I shoot for pleasure and I prefer noise-free low ISO camera with better DR and resolution. Sigma Merrill series Foveon is not perfect, but (correct me if I'm wrong) it is only 3-rd generation sensor and at ISO100 it kicks the color-guessing CMOS technology in their balls.![]()
no it doesn't regarding colors and how we se colors. Bayer sensors don't have a lower limit on color accuracy, they can achieve literally perfect (100% match to human eye perception) color.
http://alt-vision.com/documentation/AeroSense-2003-Oral.pdf
Diagrams that can help make sense of this can you found on pages 20, 21, and 22.
The diagram on page 22 is the one that will give you the true, better insight. Look at the human eye curves (upper left graph) and the Bayer camera curves (lower left graph)
Pay attention to their shapes, and how they interact with each other. The Bayer curves is similar to the eye curves. Blue barely crosses red, and green is definitely a hump in the middle. All the slopes are similar.
Now look at the Foveon (upper right) curve. Its nowhere close. Look at where red and blue cross. Instead of being below 10% of their peak values, they're at 50%. Blue should have been finished (totally out of the picture) by about 550n, but it's still going strong all the way to 660nm (pretty deep red). Green and red should both be sloping downward from 600nm on, but instead red is sloping up. This is example why the Foveon sensors have considerable difficulty discriminating many colors.
Eric Fossum ones wrote, clarity and richness from the Foveon image is a equal wonder as when a jumbo jet taking off.
ankorwatt said:well MTF diagrams gives you good information about the lens you are picking, so does this curves about problems with 3 layers of filter, there are other constructions , read earlier answer
IF there had been only minor problem with a Foveon or similar construction you can be sure there had been sensors out on the market since years back
And Foveon is not the first with a construction like this.They are the first to do a commercial product
ecka said:ankorwatt said:well MTF diagrams gives you good information about the lens you are picking, so does this curves about problems with 3 layers of filter, there are other constructions , read earlier answer
IF there had been only minor problem with a Foveon or similar construction you can be sure there had been sensors out on the market since years back
And Foveon is not the first with a construction like this.They are the first to do a commercial product
Got any diagrams on how those problems are/should be solved?
I think that scientific method is the best, except when people start using it religiously, like "... this is the only way, now and forever, amen" or "... my book says X, so your book is wrong, because my religion is the right one".
Perhaps one of the reasons why Foveon is not very popular, is that it requires more in-camera processing power, which results in slow shooting speed and short battery life.
jrista said:ecka said:ankorwatt said:well MTF diagrams gives you good information about the lens you are picking, so does this curves about problems with 3 layers of filter, there are other constructions , read earlier answer
IF there had been only minor problem with a Foveon or similar construction you can be sure there had been sensors out on the market since years back
And Foveon is not the first with a construction like this.They are the first to do a commercial product
Got any diagrams on how those problems are/should be solved?
I think that scientific method is the best, except when people start using it religiously, like "... this is the only way, now and forever, amen" or "... my book says X, so your book is wrong, because my religion is the right one".
Perhaps one of the reasons why Foveon is not very popular, is that it requires more in-camera processing power, which results in slow shooting speed and short battery life.
I would say the biggest reason Foveon doesn't sell is they are stuck in Sigma cameras. Sigma is NOT known for producing a high quality camera body, nor is it know for high quality or high end DSLR features and functionality. Their menu system is a joke. Foveon has some EXCELLENT strengths, and for types of photography that do not require high ISO (i.e. landscapes), it is an excellent design. The problem is that Sigma owns it, and they just plain and simply don't make a very good camera. Personally, I find that to be a sad state of affairs. I think Sigma purchased Foveon thinking the sensor itself would bring in the sales.
I think the Foveon+Sigma story is an excellent example of how camera BODY and its functionality overall is significantly more important than just the sensor.
jrista said:I think the Foveon+Sigma story is an excellent example of how camera BODY and its functionality overall is significantly more important than just the sensor.
ecka said:Yes. I agree.
The lack of third party RAW processing software support doesn't help as well.
CarlTN said:jrista said:I think the Foveon+Sigma story is an excellent example of how camera BODY and its functionality overall is significantly more important than just the sensor.
That might be true, but then that's why I like to purchase the sensor in Sigma's smaller and less costly DP series body (or I should say "camera"). Certainly the initial price of the SD-1 was absurd, and a bit of a fiasco...and the current SD Merrill is still not enough camera for the money.
And certainly Sigma makes very few lenses that are capable of making full use of the Merrill sensor's resolution. Perhaps the new 35mm f/1.4, and a couple of their superteles...Again, that's why I like to purchase the DP series camera, because their lenses can and do impart the full resolution onto the sensor.
But I thought this discussion was really more about the sensor itself, rather than a convenient opportunity to slam Sigma for producing less than competitive DSLR's...So it's kind of sad that it has suddenly gone in that direction.
CarlTN said:ecka said:Yes. I agree.
The lack of third party RAW processing software support doesn't help as well.
Are you saying you can't process the foveon's RAW images with third party software? Because myself and most others who used it, did so with no trouble. I have not heard of a lack of support for the new Merrill sensor, if that is what you're saying. So that's news to me. You're saying Lightroom 4 cannot open Merrill RAW files?
M.ST said:Each pixel of the new Canon prototype sensor can capture all the colors.
This is made possible by the physical fact that long-wave (infrared) light penetrates deeper into Silicon than shortwave blue light.
Red light penetrates most deeply into Silicon, green light penetrates only up to the middle and blue light reaches just below the surface of the Silicon.
With the sensor informations the camera system can calculate, which color the pixel see.
The sensor filter is no rasterized like the Bayer pattern. You don´t need a anti-aliasing filter that blur the image. And you don´t need to sharpen the picture to get an usable image. The full performance of the attached lens is available in the image after taking the picture.
M.ST said:Why make the new sensor design sense?
You get sharp images, fine details, perfect realistic colors and no moire.
M.ST said:The question is, what you want to shoot. The new sensor is very good, but not good for all. If Canon put the new sensor on the market they have also products with the normal sensor design on the market.
M.ST said:It´s a little bit like AF-systems. the phase-AF is faster but the contrast-AF has a bigger hitrate. I see that the future of the AF-systems is a combination of both passive AF-systems.
jrista said:CarlTN said:jrista said:I think the Foveon+Sigma story is an excellent example of how camera BODY and its functionality overall is significantly more important than just the sensor.
That might be true, but then that's why I like to purchase the sensor in Sigma's smaller and less costly DP series body (or I should say "camera"). Certainly the initial price of the SD-1 was absurd, and a bit of a fiasco...and the current SD Merrill is still not enough camera for the money.
And certainly Sigma makes very few lenses that are capable of making full use of the Merrill sensor's resolution. Perhaps the new 35mm f/1.4, and a couple of their superteles...Again, that's why I like to purchase the DP series camera, because their lenses can and do impart the full resolution onto the sensor.
But I thought this discussion was really more about the sensor itself, rather than a convenient opportunity to slam Sigma for producing less than competitive DSLR's...So it's kind of sad that it has suddenly gone in that direction.
Please, don't assume you know my intent, and don't put words in my mouth. I was not being opportunistic or gleeful about the option to slam Sigma, I was simply stating a fact. The FACT is, they produce an inferior DSLR. It isn't a slam, I am not sadistically getting a rise for bringing the point up. It's just a fact (even according to DPReview, the SD-1 is a real mixed bag, and has some very glaring flaws, quirky dial functionality, etc.) I know certain people like them, but numbers speak loudly, and if Sigma's cameras were better, the numbers would speak to that. The people I know who own Sigma DSLRs own them for the sole purpose of having Foveon. Few ever really bring up the body features or functionality unless the discussion takes a turn for the worse, and they enter full blown defensive mode. Interestingly, but not really surprisingly, nearly every single person I know who owns a Sigma DSLR with a Foveon is a landscape photographer, with one who does portraiture.
In the current flow of discussion, a point was made about why Sigma's Foveon isn't selling because the technology is inferior for one reason or another. I simply wanted to point out that it is less likely that the technology is inferior in general (it most certainly has its strengths, and it excels where it is strong), but Sigma isn't really the company that can bring Foveon to full bear on the market against giants like Nikon, Canon, and Sony. The truly SAD thing is that it is Sigma who owns Foveon, and that they can't seem to execute it's success. Again...I'm not opportunistically trying to bash Sigma here...its just an empirical fact (something based on years of observing Sigma fumble around with their priceless Foveon football, and never really making it, nor the camera bodies that house it, into the end zone...to my own dismay, I might add.)