Paulo Abreu
Veteran Member
Andy and others,
Although I was not going to reply, here it goes my honest opinion and forgive me Sigma owners if it ofends any - I don´t think so since I can assure you I am no troll ...
Although one pixel position has 3 sensors (one for each color), that does little for resolution, if it´s intended to compare it with a 10Mp sensor ... as it is also true to say that a 6Mp bayer chip does some guessing for the extra two colors on each pixel site and "efective" resolution drops! - that´s why a 3.3Mp output image from a SD9 (interpolated) can be compared to a Canon 10D 6Mp, side by side. If they decide to put another layer with "Emerald" then it would be a 13.2 Mp? It would be funny to ask if they put 10 milion pixels stacked on a single row of 1 pixel, that would be still a 10Mp camera capable of printing a A4 ??? - I can tell a joke, can´t I ?
I think that most people will agree that SD10 10Mp doesn´t compete with an equivalent bayer interpolated 10Mp chip in terms of resolution (like Canon 1Ds as ex), but it would also be unfair to label SD10 as a 3.3 Mp camera (due to its sensor technology), knowing how much "megapixel" counts as a selling argument!
I (as I believe almost every digital camera owner) was very entusiastic about SD9 announcement - not because of the resolution that the camera was going to output (I think very few people "need" more that 3Mp), but because of the promised unmatched quality of X3 sensor - Imagine, no more demosaicing, no more guessing, moire would be zero, there would be no noise, colors would be fantastic and realistic ... expectations were too high - marketting was tough - Bill Gates was betting his neck on this project ... hey man, I can´t remember all that happened on those days.
I think Sigma disapointed - technology was there but the final product ... the images ... the images from users, not the lab ones ... were average, below average compared to Nikon D100, Canon D60/10D or Fuji S2 Pro (mine, btw). considering the Iso limitation, the only option of raw and a few other things, it was a not very attractive package for professionals and even for advanced amateurs.
I´ve been looking at SD10 and results seem promising - nice image quality, very low noise, some new features ... I really hope SD10 will mark a turning point to Sigma, for the benefict and enjoyment of its users!
Regards and happy shooting,
Paulo Abreu,
'Buy a FujiFilm S2 Pro TODAY because ONE DAY you will be dead !'
http://www.mcscenter.net/~psergio/index.php
Although I was not going to reply, here it goes my honest opinion and forgive me Sigma owners if it ofends any - I don´t think so since I can assure you I am no troll ...
Although one pixel position has 3 sensors (one for each color), that does little for resolution, if it´s intended to compare it with a 10Mp sensor ... as it is also true to say that a 6Mp bayer chip does some guessing for the extra two colors on each pixel site and "efective" resolution drops! - that´s why a 3.3Mp output image from a SD9 (interpolated) can be compared to a Canon 10D 6Mp, side by side. If they decide to put another layer with "Emerald" then it would be a 13.2 Mp? It would be funny to ask if they put 10 milion pixels stacked on a single row of 1 pixel, that would be still a 10Mp camera capable of printing a A4 ??? - I can tell a joke, can´t I ?
I think that most people will agree that SD10 10Mp doesn´t compete with an equivalent bayer interpolated 10Mp chip in terms of resolution (like Canon 1Ds as ex), but it would also be unfair to label SD10 as a 3.3 Mp camera (due to its sensor technology), knowing how much "megapixel" counts as a selling argument!
I (as I believe almost every digital camera owner) was very entusiastic about SD9 announcement - not because of the resolution that the camera was going to output (I think very few people "need" more that 3Mp), but because of the promised unmatched quality of X3 sensor - Imagine, no more demosaicing, no more guessing, moire would be zero, there would be no noise, colors would be fantastic and realistic ... expectations were too high - marketting was tough - Bill Gates was betting his neck on this project ... hey man, I can´t remember all that happened on those days.
I think Sigma disapointed - technology was there but the final product ... the images ... the images from users, not the lab ones ... were average, below average compared to Nikon D100, Canon D60/10D or Fuji S2 Pro (mine, btw). considering the Iso limitation, the only option of raw and a few other things, it was a not very attractive package for professionals and even for advanced amateurs.
I´ve been looking at SD10 and results seem promising - nice image quality, very low noise, some new features ... I really hope SD10 will mark a turning point to Sigma, for the benefict and enjoyment of its users!
Regards and happy shooting,
--I think Sigma is pathetic. If this is not deceiving, what is? They
make 3.3 MP sensor to look like 10 MP by counting 3 pixels (red,
green, blue) for each final image's pixel. Since Canon uses 4
elements for each pixel (2 greens, red, blue), here are the true
pixel counts: 10D = 24 MP (6x4), 1D = 16MP, 1Ds = 44 MP. Is'n that
sweet.
The next step will be counting hard drive capacities in bits, not
bytes. It's 8 times more space!
Yes, you can call this post wahtever you want. I'm just sick and
tired of this 'marketing'. I just baught a DVD, capable of
wrighting 4.7G of data. And guess what, I can only take 4.5
Gigabytes of data. Oh, I didn't know that 1G is not 1 Gigabyte,
it's just G, which means nothing.
If I had more time and cared more I'd sue Sigma. It plain SUX.
People will turn away from very good cameras only to find out that
they get only a third of image data in the end.
People!!! Beware of Sigma!!! It's a scam!!!
Paulo Abreu,
'Buy a FujiFilm S2 Pro TODAY because ONE DAY you will be dead !'
http://www.mcscenter.net/~psergio/index.php