Detail Man
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Not sure what you mean by that, sire. Are you conceding my point made in the most recent post on your inspirational thread entitled, 'Sensor "efficiency"', which is, as follows:Absolutely.Aha ! Finally, a "peep" out of his eminence Lord Bustard. So ... if we are going to endeavor to fashion "metrics" surrounding image-sensor "righteousness/awesomeness/gooderness", does it not make sense to (at least attempt to) "factor in" such "evils" existing within said devices ? Please advise ...That works quite nicely for me.Source: Oxford English Dictionary.On 2nd thought, let's not give up so soon on that. What's the current accepted definition of noise?Maybe I'm just an outlier.We've already got some general acceptance on a cluster definition for "noise", so I don't see a reason /in principle/ why the scratched-record case wouldn't be admitted.
Noise:
Definition [2]: technical Irregular fluctuations that accompany a transmitted electrical signal but are not part of it and tend to obscure it.
Definition [2.1] Random fluctuations that obscure or do not contain meaningful data or other information.
From: http://www.oxforddictionaries.com/us/definition/american_english/noise
Systematic "undesirable components", such as banding and flare would not be sources of noise, in my opinion (which is not to say, of course, that they are not more "evil" than noise itself).Whether one is describing periodic readout components (generated within the imaging device itself) existing within recorded image-data that are unrelated to the scene recorded, or whether one is describing physical scratches existing on a vinyl disc used for reproducing recorded audio sounds producing sounds unrelated to the originally recorded sounds, ...
... both cases of such (aesthetically undesired, and clearly unrelated to the original scene or sounds intended to be represented) phenomena propagating through and to the output of any deterministic system(s) (as defined on the Wikipedia web-page quoted from and linked-to above) represent what may be reasonably considered to constitute undesirable components (arising soley out of the machinery involved in recording, processing, storage, or reproduction).
Both examples presented above are (for most viewers/listeners, anyway) considered to constitute what are undesirable components that are clearly not related to the original scene/sounds intended to be recorded, processed, and subsequently presented to our sensory faculties.
The premise that - rather than incorporating such phenomena into differentiations between that which is in presentation desired and that which is undesired (as in the perhaps simplisticly, but understandably, worded rhetorical categories of "signal" and "noise") - a third category must be created (in order to satisfy a particular individual definition of "noise" as having to necessarily only apply to random components), seems to me to be substantively counter-productive in what (seem to be) reasonably understandable processes of determining (including numerically quantifying) what may amount to components perceived by human beings as being "desired" and "undesired" components existing within representations of scenes/sounds which are output by systems in visual or auditory presentations provided to our sensory faculties.
It simply makes no "conmon sense" to me whatsoever to attempt to construct an image- sensor "gooderness" (or whatever) "metric" without (also) numerically including periodic readout noise.
You are (in essence) repeating yourself, my friend. Not necessary.As I said, systematic "undesirable components", such as banding and flare can most certainly be more undesirable than noise.
And what does that imply regarding elements to be included within an (image-sensor) "metric ?Indeed.Please note that flare results from optical sources interacting with lens-systems - whereas "banding" (which you have stated that - though "evil" - you do not consider to be "noise") arises within the very image-sensors that you were recently hoping to fashion a "metric" for ...
.While I get the reference to my post title, I'm afraid we listen to different music: ... ... ;-)
Oh my goodness; oh my dear ! I cannot bring myself to re-publish written materials potentially so offensive to female readers. And, it insults my dear boyhood hearthrob (Jane Fonda) to boot !
DM ...
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