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JCIA,
the Japan Camera Industry Association has today officially announced new
guidelines for the measurement and marketing of the number of megapixels
output by a digital camera. The guidelines recommend the use of effective
pixel count. We've known about this for some time, but this is the first
time JCIA have made it official. What these new guidelines mean is that
from September 1st, 2001 all new Japanese digital cameras must carry a
label which states the effective pixel count, not the total CCD pixel
count. For example todays '2.1 megapixel' digital cameras would be labelled
as '1.9 megapixel'. This is a more accurate, fairer and less confusing
method of labelling and should make it easier for the consumer to know
what they are buying.
What's still slightly confusing is that JCIA (and the manufacturers) measure effective pixels as the number of pixels captured, this is always slightly higher than the number of pixels recorded because of horizontal and vertical rows used for optical black and those discarded in the bayer interpolation process.
Example: Sony's ICX282 2/3" 5 megapixel CCD (as used in the Minolta DiMAGE 7):
Differences:
| Labelling today | After September 1st, 2001 |
| 2.1 megapixels | 2.0 megapixels |
| 3.3 megapixels | 3.2 megapixels |
| 4.1 megapixels | 4.0 megapixels |
| 5.2 megapixels | 5.0 megapixels |
It will be interesting to note how this effects brands such as Fujifilm with their SuperCCD sensor.
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