R
Ron Parr
Guest
One difference here is that I'm assuming it's relatively easy to increase buffer size by using cheap and plentiful memory solutions.No, he (and everyone else) carefully reports all three times (FPS
until full, FPS when the buffer is full, and buffer flush time. If
you think the buffer flush time is sooo unimportant, go over to the
Oly forum and read the flame wars about the E10/E20. It has the
very X3-like characteristic that the fill time may be fast but the
flush time is slow. (It also buffers the same number of frames
whether in RAW or JPEG.) See how popular this design choice is.
Some people see it as a fatal flaw, others say they can live with
it as they don't need this kind of performance.
I do agree that slow buffer flushes can by annoying. If you had pushed this point from the beginning, I would have agreed that it can be viewed as a drawback by some.
Well, I don't think anybody claimed that the sensor would be less expensive than, say, Canon's CMOS sensors.You still keep reading FAR more into my claims than I've ever said.Perhaps the hidden message in what you're saying is in the slow
response times issues I raised about.
All I've ever said was either SLOWER or MORE EXPENSIVE I/O. Not
unusable or unacceptable (although perhaps dissappointing to some.)
The inevitable consequence of producing X3 more data. I've also
said that based the cost/performance curves we have from current
cameras, this means that any sensor cost advantage may be negated.
Any savings from elminating other parts in the camera would likely be in reduced design time, which could be a big deal for a firm like Sigma, rather than reduced parts cost for a $3000 camera since the part's we're talking about (either added or removed) would not be a huge part of the cost for the camera.
It's actually pretty difficult to find the sustained FPS numbers for many cameras. I agree that they matter to some types of users for good reasons, but it's not one of the more prominent statistics used to describe the cameras. For example, it typically does not appear in Phil's summary page for cameras.Finally, we agree on something. (Is the world ending?) But allHaving a larger buffer won't change the FPS rating of the camera.
All it will change is the length of time at which it can sustain
that rate.
cameras have 2 FPS rates: one burst and one sustained. Every review
measures both (unless the camera is too cheap for them to be any
different.) You keep ignoring or dismissing the second one as
unimportant. Fine. It does not matter to you. It obviously matters
to a large number of other photographers.
Well, the D30 is two year old design (announced PMA 200) that has been discontinued. I don't view it as state of the art.Of course. That's likely one of the reasons the D30 is slower than
the 1D. Stopping and restarting has a price on both ends. BTW, I
consider the D30 "state of the art" for it's price class. If you
are saying you need something at least as good in the SD9, then you
are in the unhappy position of agreeing with me again. (Actually, I
suspect we agree95% of the time. It's just when we disagree, we
let it get out of hand.)
What I'm saying is that the easy solution, which requires no special dual ported memory, is currently adopted by some cameras that Phil has tested (e.g. D30). So, I don't agree with your claim that dual ported memory is needed. I also argued that if one demanded that writes to CF continue during shooting, one could achieve very close to dual ported speeds by introducing a small and inexpensive additional buffer (or by exploiting fast memory speed).
--Ron ParrFAQ: http://www.cs.duke.edu/~parr/photography/faq.htmlGallery: http://www.pbase.com/parr/