Not quite sure why the ISO was interesting to people. It is 50.Much more interesting is Richard’s general remark that he
wouldn’t need any extra resolution. Most of us really
don’t and seem to agree that normal use doesn’t benefit
from these 10 megapixels the “G”7 offers, even if they
were of high quality which they aren’t. Cropping possibility
would be beneficial, but as we have seen the real images are not
that detailed to take much of it. The CCD-chip is so noisy at pixel
level that aggressive advanced filtering destroys low contrast
detail even at lowest ISO, making the images look artificial and
over processed. For what the pixels are good for if not bringing
more detail? Wouldn’t it be far better to have fewer higher
quality pixels?
I can imagine how good the image quality would be if
“G”7 was equipped with a new 5 – 6 mega pixel
1/1.8 sensor. It’s a great pity that they have made a bad
trade-off to a certain kind of resolution. Lion’s share of
the potential buyers would have benefited tremendously more from
REAL high ISO capability.
I am not sure why someone wouldn't at least want the OPTION of recovering this detail. To me all the new compacts are dead. It is clear the new 10MP chips is quite noisy. Hard to say if Raw would have been enough to save it. From the Photokina samples, it is clear that it is a pixel packed noise factory with detail destroying NR mixed in.
http://i.pbase.com/o5/04/606404/1/68046096.nafoz6Qj.G7__ISO_Compare.jpg
I have to hope for the success of the Sigma DP1 to spur Canon to build one, or for Fuji to release a decent pocket high end compact. I think fuji as actually rolled back pixel count on the 1/1.6" chip. From 9mp down to 7MP. So we only have one company going against the trend. If fuji wouild build a decent compact with this chip with Raw and standard memory, I would seriously look at it.