DriftForge
Senior Member
No reason for there to be any less DR than the best P&S type cameras. Admittedly this may not be as high as people are used to in a DSLR, but I suspect you could still be looking at 6-7 stops, rather than 8-9.
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Actually, the 2/3" 8Mp Sony sensor gives up one whole stop of dynamic range to the 8Mp 4/3" Kodak sensor in the E-300/500.No reason for there to be any less DR than the best P&S type cameras.
Admittedly this may not be as high as people are used to in a DSLR,
but I suspect you could still be looking at 6-7 stops, rather than
8-9.
Maybe not all Oly cams do, but in the L10 review the per pixel sharpness in RAW with the 50mm ZD lens, the L10's sensor was much more sharp than the e-510. dpreview thought that it was likely the AA filter, and I would agree.How do you know that Olympus is using a "fairly aggressive AA filter?"
That might make sense, but maybe a weak AA filter and somewhat less pixels is a better way to get about the same results.I disagree. The point would be to oversample the lens image instead of having to use an AA filter.If a 32MP sensor distinctly outresolves all lenses for the 4/3 system, there would be no point to it, except marketing hype.
I agree that 32MP might make sense with the better of 4/3 lenses, and I certainly did not want to suggest that 4/3 is already at its limit with the current 10MP. In fact it seems that some 4/3 lenses, including some zooms, can usefully go significantly beyond 10MP.No, the fact that Olympus is still using a fairly agressive AA filter on its 10Mp sensors tells you that 10Mp isn't the limit.
OK, I see where you guys are coming from now.The idea wouldn't be to get the "full resolution" of the sensor. The
idea would be to eliminate the AA filter (which reduces contrast in
fine detail) and have a sensor that can record the "full resolution"
of the lens.
Well I'm a bit of a luddite who also thinks prints are the final arbiter. Showing a 32megapixel image on a screen at 72dpi seems quite pointless if that's the final destination. I like to make prints. If I just want to show images digitally then my ancient E-1 will more than suffice.Interesting value judgement there to suggest that prints have more
value than a digitally displayed image. May be true, but to suggest
that digital images have no value until printed... will leave that
philosophical discussion for another day.
Quite agree - bigger prints with smaller dpi are the only reason for higher pixels.That aside 32MP works out to very close to 300 dpi on A3 and 150 dpi
on A1. Whether or not that is of use for you, I suspect there are a
commercially significant number of people for whom that level of
detail would suit just fine.
It is currently impractical,
In a sense, it doesn't really have to be practical to sell it.If by that, you mean it is uneconomical or that camera makers see
more profitable alternatives, then I agree.
I had a discussion about this with my wife a few weeks ago. We came to the conclusion that printing added value to a image, but that there was value in images that weren't printed. I think the increase in value comes from 1) more work / cost being put into the printed image and 2) the additional accessibility.Well I'm a bit of a luddite who also thinks prints are the final
arbiter. Showing a 32megapixel image on a screen at 72dpi seems quite
pointless if that's the final destination. I like to make prints. If
I just want to show images digitally then my ancient E-1 will more
than suffice.