Chewngum said:Jrista, you bore me.
Please. Either you have a well founded, factually valid response, or you just validated my point about you.
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Chewngum said:Jrista, you bore me.
AvTvM said:excellent posting, Jrista!
They only point were I do not follow entirely are your remarks regarding Canon - Nikon towards the end. Nikon's newer sensors (D7000, D800) have a significant dark noise advantage over Canon sensors - that makes a difference at higher ISO's as well ... DR is better, more shadow detail can be pulled out. 5D3 and D800 crossover at about ISO 6400. D7000 and 7D probably at no ISO.
jrista said:his is largely immaterial, since it can be corrected with color profile curves...but still, its a cheat.
Marsu42 said:jrista said:his is largely immaterial, since it can be corrected with color profile curves...but still, its a cheat.
That's certainly interesting, you certainly seem to have a clue about these things, please keep posting... where does the correction take place when shooting raw, in the in-camera digic or in the raw converter?
jrista said:Chewngum said:Jrista, you bore me.
Please. Either you have a well founded, factually valid response, or you just validated my point about you.
Chewngum said:jrista said:Chewngum said:Jrista, you bore me.
Please. Either you have a well founded, factually valid response, or you just validated my point about you.
I feel I am succinct, though my point was valid. You have tremendous scientific knowledge of what should go on in inside a camera. However, you neglect to comment on or compare real world results with mathematical possibilities. I can agree even without your posts that the 7d should produce more fine detail...but mine and many others' real world testing can show the camera does not produce in the field what it does on paper.
NormanBates said:^ it's a joy reading you, jrista
NormanBates said:I'd just add that it's not an RGB curve, but a full demosaic algorithm that gets each R/G/B channel not only from the photosites that have that color, but from all photosites, R G and B, with coefficients that are usually positive for that color and negative for the others (to adjust from color crossover in the filters)
jrista said:Scale your 7D photos DOWN to your 40D size, or scale a 40D photo UP to 7D size, and the superiority of the 7D in the real world, even WITH additional noise, will be clear.
If by some fluke they are not, then the problem is not the camera...its the way the camera is used. Find ways to eliminate camera shake, make sure your using an "ideal" aperture (i.e. an aperture within that band between a little wider than f/3 to about f/6.2), or anything else that can improve your technique.
Chewngum said:jrista said:Scale your 7D photos DOWN to your 40D size, or scale a 40D photo UP to 7D size, and the superiority of the 7D in the real world, even WITH additional noise, will be clear.
If by some fluke they are not, then the problem is not the camera...its the way the camera is used. Find ways to eliminate camera shake, make sure your using an "ideal" aperture (i.e. an aperture within that band between a little wider than f/3 to about f/6.2), or anything else that can improve your technique.
My other posts in this thread more than address these statements.
Chewngum said:You're arguing a truism...boredom isn't evading your comments, its saying they're unnecessary as we're arguing different things. I will state again, I would like to see a much better system of APS-C image production from Canon. I don't care what has to change(AA filter, sensor, processor/s etc etc) but the next APS-C sensor should produce RAW files which require far less work to be made optimal.
Chewngum said:Jrista, I have neither the time or interest in replying to your essay beyond this comment.
jrista said:Anyone curious if this is still just CD-AF, or possibly some kind of FPPD-AF?? Focal-plane phase detection is a critical thing for high performance mirrorless AF. I'm rather curious if Canon will demonstrate a solid willingness to compete with the likes of Fuji and Nikon in the arena of high speed, highly capable, multi-point AF in their first mirrorless entrant...or whether they will cripple it with some kind of vastly inferior CD-AF.
How Canon play's their mirrorless card(s) will be, IMO, a clear indication of their willingness or capability to compete in the new arena of digital camera equipment. FPPD-AF would indicate they ARE willing to compete, at least to keep up with the competition. A mirrorless entrant with FPPD and a high DR 14-bit sensor would indicate they are truly serious about competing and innovating into new markets, and serving their customers quality gear. Some form of Contrast-based AF would indicate they have lost the ability or interest in solidly competing and innovating into new markets against fierce competition. A mirrorless entrant with CD-AF and the same kind of "Canonized" sensor with high low-ISO read noise and poor DR would be seriously worrying...
Maybe the 650D's continuous live AF will be an indication of things to come? A hint at Canon's competitive prowess?
AvTvM said:Overall, Canon is getting increasingly punished for not being a true innovator. During the last 4 years they have increasingly become a pure marketing (-differentiation!) company.
AvTvM said:What's worse, by now I am fairly convinced that Canon is UNABLE - as opposed to just UNWILLING - to come up with new CMOS imaging sensors that are fully competitive with Nikon's (/Sony) latest sensors.
jrista said:(BTW, based on your avatar, I think I've used a little DOF calculator you have up on the web...the site was titled Similar or something like that...)
jrista said:Chewngum said:jrista said:Chewngum said:Jrista, you bore me.
Please. Either you have a well founded, factually valid response, or you just validated my point about you.
I feel I am succinct, though my point was valid. You have tremendous scientific knowledge of what should go on in inside a camera. However, you neglect to comment on or compare real world results with mathematical possibilities. I can agree even without your posts that the 7d should produce more fine detail...but mine and many others' real world testing can show the camera does not produce in the field what it does on paper.
Sure it does...your just comparing 1:1 results. The farther you push sensor resolution past lens resolution, the "softer" 1:1 crop will look. That doesn't change the fact that higher resolution sensors ARE capturing more detail. When pixels become significantly sub-detail sized, viewing things at 1:1 crop becomes incredibly useless. Scale your 7D photos DOWN to your 40D size, or scale a 40D photo UP to 7D size, and the superiority of the 7D in the real world, even WITH additional noise, will be clear.
If by some fluke they are not, then the problem is not the camera...its the way the camera is used. Find ways to eliminate camera shake, make sure your using an "ideal" aperture (i.e. an aperture within that band between a little wider than f/3 to about f/6.2), or anything else that can improve your technique.
As for being succinct...sure, however telling me I bore you is simply an evasion, not a counter argument. ;P
koolman said:I enjoy your posts and you obviously have a wealth of tech understanding.
As far as the 7d softness debate. I too, borrowed a 7d for a few days, and compared it with my t2i. The out of camera images appeared softer / fuzzier. This mystified me... as the 7d is supposed to be far superior. Could you explain again in terms for laymen,why this is - and how I can make the 7d's jpgs appear sharp ?