On 27/03/2008, Matthew Brown morven@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Mar 27, 2008 at 1:12 PM, geni geniice@gmail.com wrote:
The next generation of high end point and shoots may include an increasing number of low light features (well they will if the manufacturers decide that 12 mega pixels is enough for now).
Forgive me for rolling my eyes on that one. Except for Fuji (and even that in a limited way), every time the p&s camera makers are faced with a choice between more megapixels and better image quality, the megapixels win.
With Fuji, between the spectacularly good F31fd and its mediocre replacement the F50fd, even Fuji fell afoul of that one. The F50fd is 12MP instead of 6MP and ... has the same functional resolution of image. And worse low-light performance. There's a reason second-hand F31fd on eBay are now going for around £200 on eBay when they were £150 new.
I'm likely to try to get myself a superzoom, which at least has a bigger light bucket on the front even if the sensor is the same as the compacts and ultracompacts. Even old DSLRs still hold their price annoyingly well.
I'm assuming a tripod will be considered excessively annoying behaviour if one uses it on every damn thing in the place. But they observably have no issues with people wandering around snapping everything they can. Lots of people had their cameras there doing just as I was, and only a few were boorish to use the flash.
- d.
It's been that way for at least the last five years; however, in going beyond 10 megapixels, we seem to have reached a point where there is no longer even a little real benefit to greater megapixels; there's none at all. No real extra resolution is being produced.
I'd like to see it, but I don't see it happening.
Heck, it happened even in DSLRs; everyone except Canon suffered worse performance in bad light going above 6MP. The Nikon D3 is an exception, of course, and the new Sony 12MP sensor appears to be much better, but things really took a dip for a while.
-Matt
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