13.8MP Kodak Tops Previously Leaked Canon 342
MadCow42 writes "With the professional imaging trade show Photokina opening this week in Koln Germany, digital camera manufacturers are announcing a stunning new lineup of professional digital cameras. These include a 13.8 megapixel monster from Kodak, and a 11.1 megapixel camera from Canon. I'm sure Nikon isn't too far behind, but no news yet on their offerings. These cameras are positioned for the professional photographer, but with list prices from under $4k to $6k, they're not out of reach for the 'pro-sumer' market either. The best news is that new products like this will push prices down on the 4-6MP cameras at the high end of the consumer level." We mentioned the premature release giving Canon's hand away; like MadCow42, I want to see what Nikon has to say.
Nikon's response... (Score:5, Funny)
OK, I'm sure they'll come out with something.
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Nikon Sucks Ass (Score:2, Troll)
Ahhh HAHAHAHAHA! ROTFLMAO! Now that's funny.
Nikon doesn't give two shits about their customers. Just ask anyone who owns an older model CoolScan. We trashed a few not so long ago because they worked fine, but Nikon won't devlop new drivers or touch the damn things. We lost a slide insert once. We ended up with a "spare" unit because Nikon doesn't make replacement parts for products that are more than a couple of years old.
Nikon is the shittiest company I've dealt with, barring Iomega.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Nikon Sucks Ass (Score:2)
Maybe so, but they're definately more related than a piano and a motocross bike.
I'd say they're related like an engine and gasoline. If you have an SLR camera and want to take the film digital, you'll need a slide scanner. Very related products, IMHO.
When a company (or its branches) decide not to support one of these two products, the chain of events breaks down, you see, and you end up screwed.
If being from a different company branch makes it OK, I guess buying an Acer scanner (for example) is fine because Acer computers are what is mostly related to their bad name, not their scanners.
Nikon, in general, deserves a bad name if they can't support the digital end of things properly, and from my experience, I'd rather buy a PCChips or Acer product instead. Much more reliable support, that's for sure!
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Nikon Sucks Ass (Score:2)
Re:Nikon Sucks Ass (Score:2)
It's the Nikon Coolpix 990, by the way. They have a 995 out now.
Re:Nikon Sucks Ass (Score:2)
Re:Nikon's response... Who cares? (Score:3, Insightful)
(p.s. I don't have any lenses from the 1970s, but I'm still glad that my modest investment in recent af nikkor lenses will not be wasted when i move to digital)
wrong on some points, right about AI: 25 years ago (Score:4, Informative)
My F100 will also do this. You have to use spot metering, but what else would a Real Man use, anyhow?
Anyways, the point is that you don't know (enough about) what you're talking about.
AI lenses were first produced about 25 years ago, so at least on that count, you're quite right that an unmodified 30-year-old Nikkor won't be real useful. Of course, if it's a long telephoto, it might be worth converting anyways. Not everyone is a staff photographer for a newspaper with a good lens pool.
Re:Nikon's response... Who cares? (Score:2)
Have you ever heard of a thing called a "light meter?"
I've got a 35/2 -- a superb lens. No, it doesn't meter on my crappy N80 -- but I *do* know how to (a)compensate for Sunny 16 and (b) use a light meter.
Besides, the bodies don't matter. It's the lenses. I know a lot of folks who'll trash their bodies, but I've yet to meet *anyone* who trashes lenses. Lenses are the real investment. And if you've got a fetish for a particular lens with a specific kind of film -- you'll reach for any body that fits the lens.
(My own fetish is an old 1960ish Russian Jupiter on a Leica M4-P. The lens is spectacular -- it gives a distinctive *look*.)
What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:2)
Re:What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:5, Insightful)
However, the imaging characteristics of film and digital are just different; resolution isn't everything and you can't compare them that way. For practical purposes, a 4 or 5 Megapixel gives most amateurs and professionals similar functionality to what they get with 35mm. Under many conditions, a 5 Mpixel digital camera produces nicer images than a 35mm film camera with any film, and under some other conditions, it's worse.
In fact, scaling up such estimates to medium format is particularly silly. People generally don't use MF or LF for higher resolution, but for characteristics like tonality and DOF. Even if you manage to get the right film and the right lens on your MF system, the longer shutter speeds and smaller DOF will likely counteract any theoretical gain in resolution under most conditions; and films for MF on the whole aren't as good for 35mm either. A Rolleiflex (maybe even loaded with Tri-X) or Pentax67 can't compete with modern 35mm SLR systems and lenses, but that's not the point.
So, don't wait for some big, high-resolution digital camera to do digital imaging. 12 Megapixels is nice, and some people may need, but most amateurs and professionals probably don't. The real news about the two latest SLRs is that they have no focal length multiplier, and that means that we finally get real wide-angles. That's been the real limitation of digital cameras so far.
Screw pixels, I want to see stock options (Score:2)
That's what I've been saying all along. For my money, digital cameras just won't compare to film until they can emulate various types of film stock. Just like I can get reverb, chorus and delay plug-ins for my audio editor, I'm not buying a digital camera until I can get (or it comes with) different plug-ins like "cheap polaroid" or "Tri-X" or whatever that all react to light (and specifically shadows and very bright light) and reproduce colors in the same way that those film stocks do.
Re:Screw pixels, I want to see stock options (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:2)
Quite to the contrary. Film needs to create tonality from discrete grains of silver (converted into blobs of dye in color). That gives you anything but a "real" pixel. Film is more like a half-toned image: you only get one bit per pixel, but you can cleverly arrange those to give the appearance of smooth shades. But you can't have high resolution and smooth shades at the same time with film.
Good digital cameras have 12 bits per pixel and channel at full resolution. That means that you get nice gradations and tonality even at their highest resolutions. To get anything close to that with film, you have to sacrifice a lot of the resolution film has. That's why a 5 Mpixel camera is probably already significantly better for most kinds of pictures than a 35mm film.
You are right that the resolution numbers of digital cameras are cheating a bit. However, it's not as bad as you may think. You really don't need high resolution for color--the eye can't see it anyway, and the compression algorithms and printers will just throw it out anyway even if you capture it.
Re:What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:2)
Film flexibility and viewing screns are, of course, also advantages of digital over 35mm. A high-end digital camera is more like a decent MF camera than 35mm.
(Any wedding photographer that uses MF for better resolution is going to have the bride hit him over the head with the bouquet. She wants her beautiful skin tone to show, not her crow's feet. Just you try it.)
Re:What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:2, Informative)
At 30,000 lpi, that would put 35mm film at something in the order of 500 megapixels.
Re:What will happen after the Megapixel race? (Score:2)
Photo-Quality (Score:2, Interesting)
Or are we already there, and I just don't pay attention?
Re:Photo-Quality (Score:2)
But digital isn't touching two other important advantages of film: colourspace and dynamic range.
Still, it's rapidly coming to the point where film is going to be replaced. For most purposes most of the time, digital seems to be there...
Re:Photo-Quality (Score:2)
720dpi= 720 dots in an inch
720x720dpi= 518,400 dots in a square inch
13million/518,400= 25 square inches
This means you can make a 5"x5" photo quality photo with a 13MP camera if photo quality is 720x720 dpipi to you. Most printers can only really do 360dpi with any real color detail. Look at the vertical resolution of the printer you want to use. I don't think many printers overlap vertically, but they do horizontally. Keep in mind that 600dpi laser printers have more accuracy than any inkjet I've seen so far. They do so because toner is smaller than ink. A new toner had to be invented for 600dpi laser printers AFAIK. Photo printers are magical, so none of this really applies with them since it usually isn't ink, thus no transference or size issues, but I haven't seen any photo printers that print much more than 25 sq. inches.
Also, just for people who can't do math (not you, other posters), 10x10 is 4 times larger than 5x5. 13MP is indead 4 times more accurate than 3.25MP, not just 2x. (some people are still learning multiplication appearantly)
End The Megapixel Race (Score:4, Interesting)
Someone, somewhere, should be working on inexpensive reusable "films" that have the same resolution as traditional film. It just doesn't make sense to be buying new cameras everytime CCDs get cheaper. At the very least, someone needs to make the chips interchangeable, but I don't think that will happen anytime soon since the camera companies like things the way they are. So, what kind of brew of light sensitive chemicals, magnetism, and degaussing apparatus will give us cheap "digital film"? Only time will tell.
Re:End The Megapixel Race (Score:2, Interesting)
Who's to say that a roll of reusable film would be cheaper or more effective than the middle ground that is emerging? That is, developing large MP CCDs that replace the film plane on a 35mm camera. That is, attaching a CCD in place of film in a regular SLR camera. In that situation, the upgrade cost is reduced and compatibility will be maintained with the existing 35mm format.
Re:End The Megapixel Race (Score:4, Informative)
Digital backs like this [sinarbron.com], this [kodak.com] and this [simius.de] have been available for medium and large format cameras for quite a while, although at that sort of price they're out of the range of your average amateur photographer. SiliconFilm [siliconfilm.com] has been promising digital backs for 35mm cameras for as long as I can remember, but they're still "under development" - read vapourware. They are showing two new models on the website (4.2 and 10 megapixels), although the product "photos" on their website leave a lot to be desired.
For those who are wondering what a digital back is and why you'd want one - it's a device which is attached to the back of the camera and provides an imaging surface in place of a roll or sheet of film. They can also have onboard flash storage or they can be wired to a computer. Pros may add digital backs to their kits because they already have thousands of dollars worth of camera bodies, lenses, filters and other accessories. Rather than buying a whole new camera system and associated accessories, they can get a digital back to fit on their cameras and keep their existing kit.
Digital Cameras ROCK!!! (Score:2)
I love it!
Between my 5 children, running my own business, and home-schooling them, I just never got the time to run stupid errands like developing film.
My my DC-210, I just plug the Compact Flash card into my USB reader, save to the HDD, and every few months to CD-R.
Given that my 1.0 MPx camera blows up to about 6x8 before looking "grainy", I can't see the need for more than about 4 Mpx, but then again, "we don't need more than 640k!"...
With my DC-210, I get pictures I simply wouldn't have any other way... pictures I will cherish as an old fart.
Anyway, I recommend one. Highly.
Re:Digital Cameras ROCK!!! (Score:2)
And yes, most everyone who has ever said "I wish I had a picture of that" would benefit from a digital camera. There's no barrier to just snapping a shot. If it doesn't work, no loss. If it does, you've got an awesome shot. It's risk free and quickly pays for itself by giving you so many photos you'd have never had. For parents, it's almost essential. So many more pictures of the rugrats, including all the moments that wouldn't be important enough to bring out a film camera that later turn out to be very important.
Don't forget backups. Your CDRs are probably as long-lasting a most drugstore prints but they're considerably cheaper. You can easily afford to burn a few more copies and keep them off-site.
More privacy concerns (Score:2, Funny)
What I mean to say is, we read about facial recognition software and the way that the government abuses it every day here on Slashdot and on other privacy sites. With the ever-higher resolutions on these cameras, it will only make it that much easier for a computer to pick out someone's face in a crowd, tieing them into a huge database of personal data that the government keeps a secret and taking away their Constitutional right to privacy. The potential consequences are astounding.
I think perhaps we should think more carefully about the implications of such an advance in technology before we go ahead with blindly cheering it on. Dire predictions just might turn out to be true.
Re:More privacy concerns (Score:2)
Now on the practical side, at 10+ megapixels running at a frame rate of say 10fps, we're talking a huge amount of processing required to do any type of facial recognition. Plus keep in mind that the problem of doing facial recognition lies not in the resolution of the images, but other things like being able to interpolate features at differing angles (both x and y), not to mention simple things like a shaved vs bearded face, hair cuts, etc, etc, etc. Remember, you only need a small set of points to match fingerprints, you don't need 400dpi scans of them to do matches. Until facial recognition makes this type of algorithmic leap, I don't think that the escalation of the resolution wars is going to help any govt find anyone.
Re:More privacy concerns (Score:2, Interesting)
This will stop, at least on any particular body. The sensor isn't the only thing that limits resolution, the lenses do, too. Consumer lenses from Canon won't actually live up to the resolution of the D1s, the Canon "L" series lenses (generalization alert) will live up to that resolution, but double the resolution once or twice more and you'll just be wasting technology.
focal length (Score:5, Interesting)
Now, if only the price came down...
Re:focal length (Score:2)
Imagine... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Imagine... (Score:2, Funny)
Floppy Disks (Score:2, Funny)
6k pocketchange anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Since when was $4k-6k "pro-sumer" range? I'm no photography/digital camera buff by any stretch of the imagination so maybe this is just my naivete but I can't see spending that much money on one of these cameras unless you are professional when a 4-6 megapixel camera delivers damn good quality pictures and will be significantly less expensive.
Re:6k pocketchange anyone? (Score:2)
I dunno .. I remember when I was looking to buy a camera a few years ago, for fun and to do some copywork.. it was me and this older dude at the counter. I settled on on a cheap Canon EOS Rebel and a the best lenses they had (the total was around $1000). The dude was going through every high-end EOS there was, the ones with eye-controlled focus, the ones with attachments for high-speed 7+ fps shooting, etc. He bought the most expensive camera and lenses, and easily put away $8000 or so.
I was asking him advice on the cameras, thinking he was some hot shot photographer. Finally I asked him if he was indeed a photographer, and what he photographed.
Turns out he was a doctor and he was buying the camera "to take on trips" and take photos of "the dog and kids".
So, yeah, there are people who just walk into the camera store and say "Give me the best". These people also do this in electronics/computer/stereo shops.
A nice demographic to target...
Re:6k pocketchange anyone? (Score:2)
Yes, and "pro-sumer" is just some damnyankeeism marketroid-speak trying to mask what they really mean - Dilbert had it right calling them the "stupid rich"
Me, I've got a Fuji s602. 3.x Mpel interpolated up to 6, pics coming in at 2.5Mb (6mpel fine) or 18Mb (6mpel TIFF). Works nicely in the dark, emulating up to ISO1600.
And my local Jessops price-matched against some of the better online pricing as well: GBP 600 for the camera, 128M smartcard, batteries & charger.
It's a step up from my old Sony DSC-F505 (2.1Mpel); it's a rather nice toy, will keep me in jpegs for the next ~2 years or so.
Ruddy "professional" cameras, indeed...
Re:6k pocketchange anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Street Rod'ers, would drop $4-$6k (easy) on their cars.
RC Airplace / Car / Boat enthusiasts could drop $4k on their piece.
Oil Painting (classes, supplies, frames, etc.) can run $4k for those interested.
Gun collectors, no prob.
None of the above are "Professionals" but are above the average "consumer" so they are "pro-sumer." I hope this helps.
It's all a matter of perception.
Re:6k pocketchange anyone? (Score:2, Insightful)
Probably true, but if you shoot a lot, don't forget that film costs can add up. (Film, processing, and in my case high-end scans.) If you are the sort of person who shoots 100 rolls/year, it's not hard to imagine this camera paying for itself in 3-4 years.
Where is this headed? (Score:2, Insightful)
But what the FSCK are we gonna do with a 100 million pixel camera (around 2010ish???) WTF? Any serious uses, I'd love to hear imaginations run wild. And no, I'm not talking pr0n, I mean medical, etc. I just don't see a use for it. Do you?
Re:Where is this headed? (Score:3, Insightful)
MP not everything (Score:4, Informative)
As an aside, the new D1s is also full frame, meaning you do not have to multiply your lenses by a certain factor in order to get correct results.
Hey dipshit, the Kodak uses a CMOS. (Score:2)
And it is also full-frame.
Re:MP not everything (Score:3, Informative)
Re:MP not everything (Score:2)
I'm glad you don't really get to decide how much resolution I'll ever need. It's more the 5 MP.
Re:MP not everything (Score:2, Interesting)
And for those interested, read this review on the D30 about why MP quality at luminous-landscape [luminous-landscape.com].
Price pressure... Really? (Score:4, Insightful)
IMHO, they won't have a real impact on that market. Canon's excellent G2, a 4-megapixel camera, is currently selling at a street price of $600-$650. Others are in that same range, between $500 and $1000. Do you really think that someone considering the purchase of a $700 camera is going to be swayed by a $4000 camera with less than twice the resolution (noting that resolution varies with the square of the pixel count)? And remember, interchangeable lenses means they're extra, so the actual price difference is actually greater.
I'm really excited about these new cameras and sensors, and I think they're going to make a big impact in the film-dominated pro market, but to think they're going to generate price pressure on sub-$1000 cameras would be like Toyota dropping Camry prices to compete with the newest Lamborghini.
"Film dominated" pro market? (Score:3, Informative)
This includes freelance AP stringers, Washington Post pool reporters, and basically all of the pros that aren't making ''art''. And the latter are growing fewer and fewer due to the superior workflow from digital cameras. Curiously (to me), the guys who have stuck it out with film are Nat'l Geographic contract heavies (McCurry, Doubillet) and climbing photography pros. At least one guy I know who is a professional freelance photojournalist (don't laugh, he makes plenty of money doing it) and avid climber, still uses a film back for his climbing shots.
All this could change (a LOT) with the advent of affordable full-frame DSLRs. I know it's tempting me... and I'm just an amateur with a lot of lab fees to nudge me in that direction.
Don't forget batteries... (Score:3, Insightful)
Square vs. Square root! (Score:2)
Uh, last time I checked two was the square root of four, not the square of four.
why is this for pros? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:why is this for pros? (Score:5, Informative)
Canon's CMOS-based sensors, which will be used in the D1s, have proven excellent color stability and tonality when used correctly as shown by folks like Michael Reichmann of the Luminous Landscape. Previous digital-SLRs that used those sensors (D30, D60) demonstrated excellent low-light performance and had smaller than "full-frame" sensors, the size of the individual pixels on the D1s won't be very dissimilar IIRC to those on the Canon D60.
Larger than 3-4 megapixel resolution does matter to me, but only because I want to make 24x16 prints. If you're happy with 8x10s, there's nothing wrong with 3-4 megapixels in and of itself (although not all 3MP cameras are created equal by any means.) Still, for regular prints there should be no reduced quality at all with proper data handling.
I do landscacpe photography, 8fps is overkill.
who's ever heard of a professional photographer printing a digital image in large format?
Moving images through a digital stage is already standard procedure for many fine art photographers who do image capture on film, folks like the late Galen Rowell [mountainlight.com] already use this process (a workflow that was, interestingly enough, improved a lot with the work of former Mac Ghod Bill Atkinson. [billatkinson.com] (Interestingly enough, these processes end up again back on silver nitrate paper, but I digress.)
Starting off with digital images would actually remove layers of "stuff" happening to the image reducing quality--so long as the orignial image is detailed enough (in spacial resolution, in contrast range, and in color resolution.) Existing sensors can achieve this, the missing link really was resolution.
The new Canon D1s (not to mention the Sigma SD9, the Kodak 14MP SLR, and the Kodak 16MP digital back for the to-be-announced-in-the-next-day Hasselblad H1) are going to take serious bites into the serious film photography market.
Re:why is this for pros? (Score:3, Interesting)
So ive got a few questions.
How does the contrast and detail of prints compare to both enlargments and contact print of standard film?
do you see any differences in various areas of the photo or is the camera which you use able to match colors and light values across the entire photo?
do you find using software ie photoshop is sufficient to make up for not being able to control the development/printing process?
what kind of printer do you use for the final product?
since you take landscapes you probably wont be able to help me here but is there a way to get really fast exposures (equivalent to 1600 iso film or greater)?
And most importantly if you were given 10 prints would you be able to tell which ones are digital and which ones are from film?
Any thoughts from people who have used digital cameras for professional
Re:why is this for pros? (Score:4, Interesting)
Actually, in a way I use both right now. I believe the Canon 1Ds will change that, the D-60 was close to what I needed, the 1Ds may be enough.
How does the contrast and detail of prints compare to both enlargments and contact print of standard film?
As far as color accuracy and tonality, while it's a bit of work (as I'll explain), digital actually gives me more control than a pure-film solution. As far as detail/resolution, 11MP should come in about break-even with 35mm film, the best lenses, etc. (My target is to be able to produce good prints up to about 16x24 inches.)
Prints from color film provide significant challenges. Color print film usually has to be hand-balanced to a particular color by a lab, color processing is tricky. Most professional photographers use slide film which provides a visible "reference" to what a picture looks like, but chemical printing of slides (via "type R" prints, Cibachromes, etc.) give you prints which much higher contrast than the original slide, there are techniques to mitigate this, but it's kind of a mess.
The best prints from slides made right now are made by making high-resolution drum scans of the slide, then making prints using a machine which exposes conventional photographic paper with digitally controlled laser beams, and controlled processing. With color management, I can actually send out for a print that matches what I see on my screen (although this also requires calibration of my monitor to a reference standard using a colorimeter.) This is a lot of work, and it gives prints that have better detail than darkroom prints (long explanation omitted), but it'd be better if I'd collected the digital image first rather than scanning the slide. 12MP (36MB) or so has been my "bar" for matching the resolution I can get.
Mind you, none of this makes any useful difference for prints 8x10 or smaller.
do you find using software ie photoshop is sufficient to make up for not being able to control the development/printing process?
Yes, Photoshop gives me much better control of things like this than the darkroom, and repeatability as well. (Once I've dodged/burned/color corrected a scan, I can have it printed multiple times and expect to get the same results, time and time again, which is essential. This is tricky to do in the darkroom.
What printer?...
The LightJet 5000, [cymbolic.com] I don't own one (they're prohibitively expensive)--I use Calypso Imaging. [calypsoinc.com] This is a very cool hybrid digital/chemical machine, essentially a digital enlarger, exposing film with lasers, processing with controlled temperature and reagents, etc. This machine (and other similar models) are very commonly used by professional photographers these days.
since you take landscapes you probably wont be able to help me here but is there a way to get really fast exposures (equivalent to 1600 iso film or greater)?
Good question. I think the "1Ds" is reputed to offer up to ISO 1250 or so, but I usually live on the other end of the ISO scale (most of my work is done on Fuji Velvia, which is ISO 50.) I'm told that the D-60 at ISO 400 gives results which in some ways have lower noise than 400 speed film, but I can't speak to higher speeds.
And most importantly if you were given 10 prints would you be able to tell which ones are digital and which ones are from film?
For well-produced Lightjet prints it would be a little tricky. The final product of either appears on standard photographic paper, photographic images tend not to lend themselves to jaggies. I just checked a couple of my own prints and a similarly produced print of this image by Galen Rowell [mountainlight.com] and I can't find jaggies with a magnifying glass on large prints.
What I think I could cue on easily is the excessive contrast of chemical prints from slides. So, "very probably," with the LightJet prints (assuming of course both were done very well) looking better (because they're more controllable by the photographer or printer.)
Re:why is this for pros? (Score:2)
An increasing number of portrait studios (ie the kind who do photos of families for the wall) are using MF cameras with digital backs, and outputting 11x14 or larger prints.
Digital format also allows quick and easy proofing for client choice of image - the pics get thrown onto a PowerPoint slideshow.
Re:why is this for pros? (Score:3, Funny)
pictures of the camera (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.dpreview.com/news/0209/02092304kodakdc
Pixels and Megapixels (Score:5, Informative)
This might be better than some 35mm films, especially at the higher ISO ratings.
Of course, it may be easier to get larger film than a larger sensor...
Still more film vs. digital links (Score:3, Interesting)
This camera will be better than film. As a pro writer/photographer who already shoots digital only at 4mp (EOS-1D), I can say that 35mm film is dead but for those quaint "vintage" photographers who are doing "art" stuff.
The amount of ignorance about digital and about photography in general here on Slashdot is shocking! These people may be geeks, but they understand little about optics, current sensor technology, film chemistry, or human perception of resolution and dynamic range.
Re:Still more film vs. digital links (Score:2)
Perhaps you'd care to enlighten us. As for this "human perception" stuff, what happens if you have to brighten or darken the image a few notches. Human perception suddenly becomes profoundly more sensitive (or was it the image that degraded?). Or what happens if the human actually looks at some subset of your image, rather than the whole thing at once?
Re:Still more film vs. digital links (Score:2)
Is this true? I thought that the limiting factor was lousy 24-bit fileformats. 48-bit goes a bit on the way, but what is the sensitivity of current CMOS arrays...
3D technology demonstrates that 128 bit color depth isn't useless (especially for professional
manipulation). Now, is the problem in cameras in sensors, lacking storage technology or just archaic fileformats?
Digtal photography should be able to bring new details to pictures where normal humans won't see a thing, maybe in the next generation.
Extreme Resolution (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, going with the assumption of a 4x3 aspect ratio in the new camera, 13.8MP would yield a resolution of roughly 4300x3225 (13,867,500 pixels). Doing simple division to fit that roughly into an 8x10 photo would give you about 410dpi. A far cry better than the 150dpi that my camera is capable of. And while it is still not in the ballpark of 720dpi (7488x5616 or 41.8MP), it's surely a lot better than this amature photographer is ever going to need.
When the 20MP cameras are available, we will be looking at 5168x3876 (20,031,168 pixels) which yields 495dpi for an 8x10 photo.
Not quite the right math (Re:Extreme Resolution) (Score:2, Informative)
For example a 2.1MP camera only produces pictures @ 1600x1200 which contains 1,920,000 pixels. This is a ratio of about 10:11. This means that the 13.8MP camera gives pictures with approx. 12.5 Mpixels You do the math of figuring out the res.
[disclaimer]I am not into digital cameras, and all I know, I learned from this article, so don't fry me OK!!![/disclaimer]
check out the pix @ dpreview.com (Score:4, Informative)
Check out some pictures of the new Kodak at dpreview [dpreview.com]. It looks pretty nice. I like big cameras that fill my hands, have a nice solid feel, and weigh a few pounds.
Of course my dream camera is 4-6 megapixel SLR that has a full-35mm-size *interchangeable* sensor (in case I want to upgrade to more pixels), low noise, good color, and takes EOS lenses. All for $500 or less. Just a few more years....
3mp is good enough (Score:2)
Maskirovka
Re:3mp is good enough (Score:2)
I'm getting full edge to edge 8.5x11 for ~$0.18 per page including ink and photopaper. And I get them in 5 minutes, not 3 days, and living in alaska I'd be paying a lot more for freight service. Interesting idea though.
Maskirovka
Just an FYI (Score:5, Informative)
Ask yourself this. How many 8x10 photos have you made and kept in the past few years? If your like the average consumer and do 4x6's and 5x8 's a good 2.1MP will do you well.
Plus keep in mind that A) you will need a high speed connection if you want to upload your photos to an online printer. My father realized that after buying a 3MP and trying to upload a roll of 30 via a 56k line which as we all know only does 33.6 up. Also realize that B) printing your own photos is very expensive and between the ink and paper really burn money.
So while its all good and well that these higher MP camera are coming out, the cost of the camera can really sometime be minimal over the other expenses you may incur.
minor correction (Score:2)
"Unless your a serious photographer a 2.1MP with a good optical zoom..."
The reason is an optical zoom truely magnifies the subject, while a digital zoom just blows up the same area and doesn't really optically magnify it. This can often result in a blurry picture. So in otherwords, don't user digital zoom.
Re:Just an FYI (Score:5, Interesting)
As someone else said, the point of digital is to pick and print the best, not everything. Digital loses most of its price advantage if you go and get prints made.
I've shot 8000 pictures since May, I've had 50 4x6 prints made, mostly for greeting cards. The 5800 or so that I've kept are all on the computer. When I did want prints made I tossed the 20 different shots on a CR-RW and walked a few blocks to the neighborhood camera store/photo lab.
As for the use for resolution? It lets you crop a lot and still have a very high-res print.
Besides, if you keep your photos on the computer you can zoom in and scroll around, seeing a lot more detail than you could if you printed out everything at 8x10.
BTW, for anyone looking to buy a digital camera, get one you like the interface for. Nikon has a horrible reputation in this area, Canon is great, Minolta and Olympus are pretty good. The whole point of digital is to allow you to take a picture anywhere, anytime, if you have to fight your camera to use any manual function you're not going to do a lot of photography. For choosing a camera, read the reviews at www.dpreview.com or a similar site. And don't obsess about mega-pixels. Quality is only partly related. A good 4MP will blow away an average 5MPs. And buy one with a 'fast' lens (low F-stop rating. Try to f2.0 at least.) The physical lens needs to be large, a pinhole doesn't let in enough light to be easily usable in the evening or indoors.
Re:Just an FYI (Score:2)
Re:Just an FYI (Score:2)
It is true enough: for those people that are not really into photography, but just want to make happy snaps of their holidays, 2.2MP is just fine. As with anything, pick your camera according to your particular needs. I am a casual photographer so I picked the Sony, one of the better hobby camera's at the time. It fits in any coat or even trouser pocket so I carry it with me, always. Also a very good underwater house was available, and the underwater pictures it makes even with just the built-in flash ar just incredible. All that for a mere $900, not a lot at the time. If you make photos like I do, spending big bucks on a digital SLR is a waste of money
Re:Just an FYI (Score:2)
Its hardly a stupid comment, and is in fact one of the first things people realize once they've bought a digital camera is how long uploading takes,and much much paper and ink cost. Your forgetting how cheap these cameras are now. Many families browsing Walmart or Compusa just think "oh neat" and buy a camera thinking it can replace their traditional 35mm, and then realize there is a downside. Obvious you and I know better, but someone buying their first digital camera probably doesn't.
A Camera That Goes Up To... Thirteen??! (Score:5, Funny)
I can just picture in Koln, Germany right now...
Kodak: The numbers all go to thirteen. Look, right across the board, thirteen, thirteen, thirteen and -
Canon: Oh, I see. And most cams go up to eleven?
Kodak: Exactly.
Canon: Does that mean it's sharper? Is it any sharper?
Kodak: Well, it's two sharper, isn't it? It's not eleven. You see, most blokes, you know, will be shooting at eleven. You're on eleven here, all the way up, all the way up, all the way up, you're on eleven on your camera. Where can you go from there? Where?
Canon: I don't know.
Kodak: Nowhere. Exactly. What we do is, if we need that extra push over the cliff, you know what we do?
Canon: Put it up to thirteen.
Kodak: Thirteen. Exactly. Two sharper.
Canon: Why don't you just make eleven sharper and make eleven be the top number and make that a little sharper?
Kodak: [Pause] These go to thirteen.
(sorry)
Perfect Film Grain/Resolution/Megapixel squareoff (Score:5, Informative)
Many pundits here have been instantly shouting that 16+megapixels are unnecessary. They are very wrong. 16 megapixels only approxomate 35mm-- and don't even come close to large-format film.
The comparison is educational & eye opening and EXTREMELY well documented, with pictures.
The readers digest version is that "From these tests, it is my opinion that digital cameras will match Fujichrome Velvi 35mm film when they reach more than about 10 megapixels. Somewhere in the 12-16 megapixels will produce color image quality comparable to 35 mm film (this is a compromise of more intensity detail and less color detail than film). Somewhat fewer megapixels, approximately 7-8 Mpixels will match 35mm film intensity detail but at below 35mm film color detail.
Medium format film: about 50 digital camera megapixels are need to match Fujichrome Velvia in 6 x 4.5 cm.
Large format: more than 200 digital camera megapixels are need to match 4x5 Fujichrome Velvia film. How much more needs futher testing. "
Thanks Roger N. Clark.
ö? o:? colon? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:ö? o:? colon? (Score:2, Informative)
The same rule applies to my name.
Scanner replacement (Score:4, Interesting)
This camera sounds like a great alternative. 3000 by 4000 pixel resolution means 400 dpi for a 10" text area (two pages of a book) and you need that resolution for good OCR'ing. The camera is portable--just bring a typewriter page holder to prop up the original, and fast: click! (turn page) click! (turn page) click!.
If I get the cash together I could imagine buying one just to use for stuff like this.
Hmmm... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2, Informative)
my experiences (Score:3, Informative)
So how much saving over film & developing charges? Well, 16000 pix / 24 pix = 666 (!) rolls of film. 666*$10 film & develop charges = $6,600. Thats the minimum it would have cost! And I probably shot at least two to three times that and tossed out the crap.
Foveon (Score:3, Informative)
I have to think that buying a really high end diigtal camera in the next few years is only practical for a company with a lot of money - otherwise the imaging and storage technologies being developed and refined really make waiting worth while.
At the moment a good film scanner and camera are as appealing to me a digital system, and cheaper too. Plus film is a lot easier to deal with at the moment when travelling if you take more than a few hundred pictures.
Here you go: (Score:2)
Pretty darn good, (as most digicams are these days, anyway) considering the circumstances.
J.
The difference between film and digital (Score:4, Interesting)
On a tripod, and assuming no subject movement, resolution will be limited by a combination of the film capability and the lens capability. This gets quite complicated because with conventional film the resolution degrades fairly gracefully. As the detail gets smaller lens contrast is lost, but also film contrast is lost because of scatter, flare, grain pattern. In theory a Leitz 50mm lens operating at around f/5.6 can achieve an equivalent of about 30MPx, but in practice nothing like this will be achieved by most subjects most of the time.
However, there are other fiddle factors. First, digital camera makers lie^x^x^x apply interpretation to their camera sensors. A camera advertised as 2.1MPx tends to have rather fewer actual working pixels, the rest is done by "interpolation", a process which involves removing artefacts, a degree of dither, and the fact that most image sensor cells, instead of having RGB sensor sites, have in effect RGBG with twice as many green, owing to the need for an XY matrix. It also loses performance because, having only a small photosensor, the lens design is compromised. All the years of 35mm lens development do not apply to the tiny short focussed lenses of small digital cameras.
Second, there is no direct equivalence between film photography, with its analog response (gradual degradation of image as detail gets smaller) and digital sensors which are all or nothing. Increased subject contrast increases resolution on analog cameras but can only increase the contrast on a digital sensor.
Finally, with a film camera you can increase resolution and image quality at the expense of light sensitivity by changing film.
My conclusion: I suspect that for most people most of the time something like a Canon G2 is perfectly adequate. But if you want to take high res photos on a tripod, if you need to use long or short focus lenses, if you want the highest color resolution, you need film.
Since you can currently get this quite easily, buy the G2 now, keep the 35mm system and wait till the pros start discarding their second hand bodies when the pixel count goes up to 22 or 30. There will be some bargains, and with your 35mm system you can always get the performance when you need it, using that old clunky silver technology.
Are you sure? (Score:2)
Prosumer is actually on the $1000-$1200 range. ust go to an electronics store and see how many camcorders. SLRs and digicams cross over that price range.
Not a hell of a lot.
50 Mega Pixels (Score:3, Interesting)
I guess his life will be 4 times easier
Also there is a preview of the cannon on www.dpreview.com
Re:How many MPs do I really need? (Score:4, Informative)
Let's say you ignore that and print at 300 dpi. That's 2400 by 3000 pixels. There's 7.2 MP.
Re:How many MPs do I really need? (Score:2, Informative)
I could be wrong on this, but I Know that 300dpi is Way too low to make an 8x10 print, the inkjet might spit it out fast, but it ends up looking horrible.
Re:How many MPs do I really need? (Score:3, Insightful)
A 720DPI printer, for example, will be able to spit about half a million ink droplets per square inch of paper, but one ink droplet != 1 pixel. Remember, as the previous reply stated, the printer uses many small droplets of exactly four colors (some inkjets use up to eight colors) of ink and attempts to create the perception of a certain color by mixing dots of those, much like your monitor uses different and separate intensities of red, green, and blue to approximate a color other than one of those three.
So how does the DPI rating of an ink printer relate to the DPI of a digital camera? It doesn't necessarily. In fact, most parts of any color printout will not have the maximum number of ink droplets (even if using absorbent photo paper) because far fewer are needed, particularly with light colors. There is absolutely no way to compare the two, but in general a 300DPI image will look better than most modern ink printers can accurately portray, and 600DPI will approach the representational limits of color laser, dye sublimation, and good thermal wax printers.
The DPI-to-paper ratio is a simple matter of comparing the resolutions (say, 1600x1200) of the digital camera image with the size of the printout (say, 8x10")
Re:How many MPs do I really need? (Score:2, Insightful)
While I wouldn't pay thousands for this capability, I'll love having every megapixel I can get. It's like hard drive capacity, who could ever use 40 megs, I mean a gig, scratch that 20 gigs.
Depends on what you want. (Score:2)
Take a good 8x10 from a good printer, on good paper.
Then take a good 8x10 photo-print on real photo paper, from real 35mm film. Or hell, even from 50mm (or whatever the professional standard is).
Now take out a magnifying glass.
Now you will see the difference.
Re:Depends on what you want. (Score:2)
So what you're saying is that there is no difference except under entirely unrealistic viewing conditions.
Excellent - I don't know anyone who uses a magnifying glass to view the physical prints I put out (yes, on photo paper at the highest (1440x720) resolution of my old Epson Colour600), so I don't need to do any better than that.
To be honest, I output A4 size (approx 10x8 inch) prints from digicam pics (output quality as above) from 1200x960px digicam shots, and I can't see the pixelation under usual viewing conditions. I don't even need the full 3.3MP of my camera, let alone more resolution, for what I do.
What would make a difference is more manual control over the camera - particularly manual focusing (or at least a more definite focus point such as an SLR split ring), aperture and shutter speed. Hell, even a nominal ISO rating of the CCD would be useful.
Oh, and an ability to use my real lenses, rather than the toy optics I've got in my Sony DSC-P1, particularly if I can get apertures up around f1.8 or so.
What I basically need is a digital body version of my Canon EOS 360...
Re:my gf's dad (Score:4, Funny)
Personally, I'm waiting for Dr. Arroway's camera in the movie Contact [imdb.com]:
"...we have your personal recording unit. Normal, infrared and ultraviolet lenses. Digital microchip, good for thousands of hours of recording."
Maybe that will be Nikon's response!
Re:Nikon Body? (Score:2)
Re:Nikon Body? (Score:2)
That is a false rumor (Score:2)
Oops, meant it has single CMOS sensor (Score:2)
Re:11 megapixel? maybe not. (Score:2)
News at 11.
Re:Digital Advice (Score:2)
A Canon, Minolta, or Olympus would be good. The Canon S30/S40 are good. The Canon G2 is better, it's got an even brighter (wider, faster, etc) lens which helps for shots indoors without flash.
Spend as much as you can reasonably afford. There's never too much detail and you can't get more later. You can print your pictures later if you feel the need, but likely you'll keep all but a few wall-hanging ones on the computer. The savings from this will easily pay for the camera.
You probably won't be happy in the long run with Less than an Canon S40/G2 or comparable. You won't be able to make really clean 8x10s (important for the grandparents) and the better the camera, the more manual functions it'll have, letting you override it when you get better at photography. (And you will, a few thousand pics later, with the camera saving all the settings info for later perusal, and you can't help but learn.)
If you want more, specific info, reply to this. I don't want to get too wordy initially though.