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Samsung's Advanced Chips Give Its Cameras a Big Boost

GhostX9 writes: SLR Lounge just posted a first look at the Samsung NX1 28.1 MP interchangeable lens camera. They compare it to Canon and Sony full-frame sensors. Spoiler: The Samsung sensor seems to beat the Sony A7R sensor up to ISO 3200. They attribute this to Samsung's chip foundry. While Sony is using 180nm manufacturing (Intel Pentium III era) and Canon is still using 500nm process (AMD DX4 era), Samsung has gone with 65nm with copper interconnects (Intel Core 2 Duo — Conroe era). Furthermore, Samsung's premium lenses appear to be as sharp or sharper than Canon's L line and Sony's Zeiss line in the center, although the Canon 24-70/2.8L II is sharper at the edge of the frame.

192 comments

  1. Center sharpness is not as important by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Informative

    The whole reason to pay a premium price for a lens is that you get better sharpness across the frame.

    I'm sure Samsung's lenses are pretty good, but I'm dubious about them until I see more photographic testing over this spec fest which doesn't tell you a lot about a lens.

    I have to say Samsung has some serious balls pushing so hard to enter a shrinking market against giants like Nikon and Canon...

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by jandrese · · Score: 1

      This is about interchangeable lens cameras (DSLR), not the consumer POS market that has been all but killed by the rapidly improving cameras on smartphones.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    2. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's to loose ? Samsung can easily sell it's new sensors.

    3. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by tonywong · · Score: 1

      Looking pretty decent. Not crap on first look, but more investigation needed.

      http://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2014/12/one-single-samsung-nx-1-test

    4. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole reason to pay a premium price for a lens is that you get better sharpness across the frame.

      I'm sure Samsung's lenses are pretty good, but I'm dubious about them until I see more photographic testing over this spec fest which doesn't tell you a lot about a lens.

      I have to say Samsung has some serious balls pushing so hard to enter a shrinking market against giants like Nikon and Canon...

      They're not bad
      http://www.dxomark.com/Reviews/Samsung-NX-prime-lens-reviews-five-models-measured/Samsung-NX20-primes

      But I agree, their lenses aren't as good as Canon's right now BUT if Samsung sold their sensors to 3rd parties like Sony...

    5. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Loose is the opposite of tight, and it's means it is.

    6. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Ballsy to enter with such a good sensor? I don't think so.

    7. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Glad someone said it.

    8. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      IIRC, samsung cameras don't have mirrors, and therefore are not DSLRs.

    9. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Samsung makes mirrorless and mirror (SLR) cameras. They bought Minolta when they went under. The address much of the same market as Nikon & Canon with the exception of full frame.

    10. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by AK+Marc · · Score: 1
      So, rather than buying a Sony lens for a Samsung camera, you'll buy the worse body because you want the name on the body and camera to match?

      I have to say Samsung has some serious balls pushing so hard to enter a shrinking market against giants like Nikon and Canon...

      From the fact that their "weak point" was the lenses, I'm guessing that they have body and chip manufacturing down for other things, and decided to try cameras on a lark, and managed to out-class the leaders on a first attempt. What's that say about the others?

    11. Re: Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong on all counts. Konica-Minolta never went under, and their photo division was bought by Sony, not Samsung.

    12. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Sony bought Minolta and makes mirrored and mirrorless cameras.

    13. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by AK+Marc · · Score: 0

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/N...
      "As with other DSLRs, the D90's CMOS sensor captures video frames using a rolling shutter,"

      Many DSLRs have no mirror anymore. They have rolling shutters, and that allows them to film video and use a screen on the back as the viewfinder. "SLR" was used to differentiate between cameras with separate viewfinders and ones where you see what comes in the "main" lens. For that purpose, all the discussed cameras are DSLR. That there is no longer a "reflex" isn't a issue for most of the people using that term.

    14. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sigh.

      SLR (single lens reflex) has a mirror, with either a pentaprism or pentamirror (where you stick your eyeball) to show you the view as it is through the lens. This was an upgrade from the TLR (twin lens reflex) system, which through the magic of two lenses, let you look through the viewfinder and one lens, while the second lens was presented in front of the film. The bonus to TLR is that there is no lag due to lock up of the mirror, since there is no mirror present. But SLR won out because it was lighter and cheaper since you were only carrying around the important half of what makes a camera work.

      When you use live view or EVF or to view what the imaging sensor is capturing, that's mostly equivalent to what you'd normally see on the SLR/DSLR. What the capture is going to capture. No parallax error. Rangefinders were in this category (think Leica M series) - valued to size and discretion - but they use a window to the side of the lens, and they begin to shine not-so-much when you have a telephoto on the body - start guessing where the frame actually is due to parallax differences. It's an acquired skill between bodies and lenses. This is more the size/form factor now used by the mirrorless systems, as a lot of people are attracted to the size and weight, costs ~ same (Leica M9 vs 1Dx and relevant lenses likely just as costly to be honest). If you can shoot in that style, cool. Advantages to DSLR's also still, but that's equalising. EVF resolution especially made a difference, lens availability, autofocus, etc.

      DSLR's all have mirrors - otherwise they would be known as a mirrorless camera (such as the sony and panasonic micro four thirds systems) OR if it exists, a DTLR. Electronic viewfinder of whatever size (EVF vs bigger screen you can maybe touch) to show you what the sensor is seeing.

      The D90 quoted has a mirror, it's just moved out of the way for your video shooting abilities on what was a film camera to begin with...It's phase detect AF and analogue optical view for the photos (dedicated AF sensor + mirror), and contrast detect (on capture sensor dedicated points) for the video. You can also shoot photos with live view, for a punishment in AF speed if anything like Canon. Most DSLR's work in this way to provide video. The SLR part of it is just moved out of the way for video. Yet to be seen if phase detect or contrast detect is better, manual focus for video still feels better for now.

    15. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      The shutter has nothing to do with the mirror, the D90 still has a reflex mirror and an optical pentaprism viewfinder.
      Mirrorless cameras have no mirror, and electronic viewfinders or none at all, Sony SLR style cameras have a fixed semitransparent mirror and are called an SLT rather than DSLR.
      All canon and nikon DSLR cameras still have a mirror and optical viewfinder.

      If a camera with a mirror is using the rear LCD as a viewfinder then the mirror is locked in the up position and the viewfinder will be black where mirrorless and SLT cameras can use both the viewfinder and the LCD at the same time.

    16. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      I own a D7000, the D90's successor. It has an optical viewfinder, and a mirror. When I press the shutter button, the mirror flips up, blanking out the viewfinder, the shutter is tripped for a fraction of a second, and then the mirror flips down again, letting me see through the viewfinder again. The viewfinder is a purely optical device, relying on a pentaprism to show an upright version of what the film or sensor will be exposed to.

      After turning off the camera, and even after removing the batteries, the viewfinder will still let me look through the lens-- not a great advantage, mind you, but it is a consequence of the technology, It does save on batteries, though.

      In a mirrorless camera, the viewfinder is a tiny lCD display, showing what the camera sensor is recording. The viewfinder will not go dark when the shutter is pressed, and it will even show the effects of in camera electronic filters. I don't have such a camera, but I would imagine that the viewfinder would be blank if I turned off the camera and removed the batteries. :)

      You can make a smaller, lighter camera, if you ditch the flipping mirror for a screen on the back or a electronic viewfinder. An electronic viewfinder is even useful for recording video-- on my D7000, the optical viewfinder is completely blanked out during video mode, as otherwise the mirror would get in the way.

    17. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The whole reason to pay a premium price for a lens is that you get better sharpness across the frame.

      No, that is not the whole reason. I'll pay a premium price for a lens loaded with aberrations if it is fast. Not everyone cares about corner sharpness.

    18. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and managed to out-class the leaders on a first attempt.

      I seriously doubt it was their first attempt. They just scrapped the failed ones before marketing heard about them.

    19. Re:Center sharpness is not as important by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Sony sell NX mount lenses?

      decided to try cameras on a lark, and managed to out-class the leaders on a first attempt

      Sigh. So the sixteen ILC cameras they've released in the last five years don't count?

  2. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What an idiot.

  3. Re:Who cares would still buy a Canon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Good one. We also would have accepted Shamesung or Shitsung.

  4. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Are you a professional photographer? Or just a Slashdot troll.

  5. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am someone who is not an idiot.

  6. Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by msobkow · · Score: 0

    Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics who are fans or detractors of various brands. This should be as good as a discussion on audio quality... :P

    --
    I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
    1. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

      It doesn't much matter as the lens largely determines which brand of body one buys. I have several grand invested in Canon lenses, so in order to switch to Samsung, Sony or Nikon bodies, I would have to be convinced that their technology won't just be better for the next generation, but will be better for a very long time. Not likely to happen.

      What this might do is change where new photographers wind up, but if they don't have good glass to back this up with, it's not going to make much difference.

    2. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Queue the samsung fanboy ^

    3. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You might find this article to be useful and informative.

      Trolling for Dummies

    4. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Something I never understood about random grammar and spelling. People somehow can't tell it's from its, loose from lose, get all kinds of common words wrong (definately, anyone?), but yet a complicated soup of French vowels, they spell it right *every* *time*, even though they mean "cue", which is EASIER to spell!

      I just don't get it!

    5. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by EETech1 · · Score: 2
    6. Re:Cue the judgemental and rabid fanatics by msobkow · · Score: 1

      So laughing at the expected arguments and flame wars that are about to ensue is "trolling"? I said nothing to actually start an argument.

      Methinks you need to look up the definition of the word...

      --
      I do not fail; I succeed at finding out what does not work.
  7. Lens mount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The principle reason I purchased a Sony A77 (over Canon and Nikon) was: I could use my existing collection of auto-focusing lenses from the Minolta days (the ones with a bayonet lens mount). Minolta was one of a few camera companies who made their own glass. To this day I regularly use these APO lenses, and the results are still stunning. So if Samsung offers a body with a compatible mount, I'll consider it.

    1. Re: Lens mount by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Canon, Nikon, Pentax, Ricoh, Leica, Zeiss, Sigma, and many others have always made their own glass.

  8. Not gonna happen (to Sony anyway) by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    But I agree, their lenses aren't as good as Canon's right now BUT if Samsung sold their sensors to 3rd parties like Sony...

    I'm sure Samsung will sell some sensors to someone, after all, they sell parts to other companies so it's only natural.

    However I can't see Samsung selling sensors to Sony, it would be like selling ice to an eskimo - Sony is the company that makes sensors for many other camera makers and I sure don't see Sony not using their own sensors in cameras.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Not gonna happen (to Sony anyway) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My grammatical error...

      "If Samsung sold their sensors to 3rd parties like Canon, Pentax, and Nikon like Sony sells to Canon, Pentax and Nikon."

      Canon uses Sony chips for their point-and-shoots. Canon 1D used Panasonic CCD because it was the best at the time.

    2. Re:Not gonna happen (to Sony anyway) by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Or, more simply, "... if Samsung sold their sensors to third parties like Sony does..."

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  9. Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by SuperKendall · · Score: 4, Informative

    Consumer grade lenses are already blurry at the corners. I'm talking about higher-end DSLR lenses, in those lenses center sharpness is pretty much assumed, the bigger deal is sharpness across the whole frame. That's what you are paying money for in high end lenses, not the easily achieved center sharpness but really great sharpness everywhere.

    Also there was no mention of how the bokeh was... that's the element that brings people back to certain lens makers like Zeiss.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure, but the Samsung S lens is still a $1k lens, and they're pitching it as a L-type lens.

      The video here shows that think they can catch up using technology.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bJ7XbVZTj-k&src_vid=p0jLIuurH64&feature=iv&annotation_id=annotation_882327

      I think their 300/2.8 will be the real arbiter. That has to compete against Canon's 300/2.8 if they want to really be a player. Tokina and Tamron have not been successful.

    2. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Why would a 300 mm lens be critical to Samsung's success? It's too long for portraits, especially on a APS-C sensor.

    3. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Informative

      For portraits, "bokeh" at the strength of lenses like Canon's 85/1.2L on FF will give you a better picture than almost anything out there. Since portraiture has good lighting either natural/studio/strobes, all of the strengths of the NX1 are limited.

      The NX1 is boasting 15 fps which could actually be useful in sports. The ultra fast AF would be useful also. The 300/2.8 is the workhorse of most sporting events. If they can pull off a fast 300/2.8, theyll be able to compete against Canon and Nikon.

        Think about the 2018 Olympics in Korea... By then, they'll have a next generation NX1 and hopefully the 300/2.8.

    4. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 2

      Ah, ok. As for portraits-- the 200mm f/2 is said to be commonly used for head shots.

    5. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was taught that the 135mm length on a 35mm camera was the ideal portrait lens. Any shorter, and you start getting distortion of facial features. Any longer and you "flatten" features. Obviously you'd make adjustments for a non full-frame sensor.

    6. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sounds like this came straight from Ken Rockwell.

      A lot of pros prefer the 85mm-105mm range for portraiture on full frame cameras. 135mm is rather unusual.

    7. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 1

      That is what I was taught years ago as well but what I wonder is if photography is still really taught other than here is how to use this specific device.

      --
      Time to offend someone
    8. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yeah, 90mm was the traditional portrait lens.

      I'm weird, I like wide angle shots for portraits. Probably why I'm not as good as the pros :)

    9. Re:Yes, I'm talking about DSLR lenses by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      In 1959 Nikkon called their fast versions of 3.5 cm, 5 cm, and 10.5 cm lenses the three sacred treasures. Tastes have changed.

  10. Ridiculous comparison, pure FUD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They are comparing against the Canon EOS 5D Mark II... which was released in 2008. Sensor tech advances at a fast rate, basically being eclipsed every 18-24 months. So the review compares Samsung's latest sensor against a Canon sensor from 7 years ago that is essentially 3 sensor generations old.

    1. Re:Ridiculous comparison, pure FUD by qpqp · · Score: 0

      So the [bought] review compares Samsung's latest [tech] against a [competitor] [tech] from [n] years ago that is essentially [x] [tech] generations old.

      FTFY. Standard Samewrung practice, nothing to see here. Move along.

  11. Sensor differences don't matter by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Like so many other tech articles this is focused on selling expensive upgrades based on trivial differences - otherwise we'd be looking at full sized pictures instead of tiny crops...

  12. 99% of people commenting on this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Will be talking out of their ass, just trying to raise a ruckus.
    The very first comment gets it wrong: photographers care about anything that gets them The Picture.
    Sometimes that means more megapixels.
    Other times it means FEWER megapixels but a lot of frames per second.
    And yet other times it is simply the camera you have NOW that matters, so a small, pocketable camera (even a cell phone) is the best choice.
    Even having the SHARPEST lens possible is not always a critical point, folks.
    Here is the big trick:
    cameras don't take pictures.
    Lenses don't take pictures.
    Photographers take pictures, and use various tools that capture data to do so.
    Back in the film days it was analog data and the entire process was far more expensive, and the tools were... trickier to work with.
    Now it is digital data that we capture (except when using film cameras, of course!) and computer processing has advanced so much that even the truly crappy cameras in our phones are actually pretty damn good for snapshots or even some very nice shots- as long as motion or distance are not involved, or real control over the image data captured is not critical.
    What dSLRs still have over every other option is this: control can be yours, not the cameras. Sometimes this is the BEST choice.
    What mirrorless has is small size/weight. They can even be competitive on MP, and can do great images. But it is far more difficult to get sports or wildlife such as birds due to less competent focus and slower speeds. They also often compromise the controls too much for easy adjustment WHILE shooting.
    Small compacts- yeah, better off with the phone nowadays.
    What Samsung is trying to achieve is a disruptive camera- something that brings dSLR-like control, speed and image quality to a smaller, mirrorless camera that also supports interchangeable lenses for different needs while also simplifying workflow.
    Nobody has MASTERED this yet- not by a longshot.
    I don't think Samsung has either, but it looks like they are at least moving in the right direction.
    I'm not ready to give up on my $8k of equipment yet, of course...

    1. Re:99% of people commenting on this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not YOU though, right?

    2. Re:99% of people commenting on this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That is obviously correct, sir. ;)

  13. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Only gadget guys obsessed with numbers would buy a Samsung camera. Photographers just don't care about nm and megapixels.

    What an idiot.

    Really? So if the numbers look great in the die size of the sensor and the megapixels, but the lenses front focus that's OK? Or they have twice the megapixels on the sensor and the glass is soft outside of the center of the FOV? Focus speed is insanely important to sports photographers. All the megapixels in the world aren't going to change that.

    Professional photographers, and most amateurs will tell you to purchase good glass. camera bodies are temporary. Canon and Nikon have the majority of the high-end market for a reason. I can purchase the Canon 24-70mmL lens for around $2K. It will fit on virtually every Canon DSLR that I'd consider using. Anything from a couple hundred dollar Rebel APS to a full frame 5D mark3 for 3 grand.

    Will Samsung still be doing that in five years? I don't know. So for most serious hobbyists, to pro photographers, it's simply a big risk. After Samsung has been in the market for a few years, this may change. But not for someone who has half a dozen or more pro grade lenses. You don't toss $20K+ worth of lenses simply because some newcomer to the market puts out a new sensor.

  14. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Thanks for clarifying. It's hard to tell these days. Queue the IANAI disclamers.

  15. The firmware has probably helped them, too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Obviously this is not to downplay the importance of hardware and chip design, but it's worth noting that the NX1 runs Tizen, much like their other new cameras. There was a noticeable improvement in their cameras when they switched over. A lot of things related to the user experience side improved, particularly the responsiveness of the device.

  16. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    So if the lens is great, you don't care if you use it with an old ~1 megapixel camera with a noisy sensor that requires long exposure times in reasonable light settings? Countering the idea that megapixels don't matter isn't the same as saying they are the only thing that matters.

  17. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Luckyo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    That depends. If you already have a lot of hardware, you're locked in by vendor.

    But if you don't, you get another option. That's not a bad thing.

  18. So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by caseih · · Score: 3, Informative

    Seems like Android phones can outspec the iPhone in every way, including megapixels, but none that I've seen have the image quality of the iPhone camera. It's quite embarrassing how good of pictures my friends with iPhones can actually get. Mine are always noisy and blurry. Even with the LED flash. What's crazy is that even Sony, who makes the camera and camera chipset for Apple cannot even get a camera as good on their Android phones. What am I missing?

    1. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not a matter of can or cannot, it's an issue of why bother when this is a cell phone and not a camera.

      Apple has to do things like that in order to get people to pay too much for their hardware, but Android manufacturers tend to focus more on things that actually relate to the phone.

    2. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      trollololol. As if competing Android phones aren't the same price. Don't you kids get tired of your corporate cheerleading? Apple or Google, seriously who cares.

    3. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 3, Interesting

      did you swap iPhone for Android in your text? I usually have iPhone people asking me to take pictures with my SIII because it takes so much better shots.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    4. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      right, because nobody cares about taking pictures with their phone

      idiot

    5. Re: So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Nexus 6 camera beats iPhone 6 hands down in a blind test. http://bgr.com/2015/01/07/nexus-6-vs-iphone-6-plus/

    6. Re: So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by someoneOtherThanMe · · Score: 3, Funny

      Blind testing cameras? Hmm...

    7. Re: So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not much of an article. Only a 100% crop of one scene and that's not enough to draw any sane conclusions.

    8. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Trax3001BBS · · Score: 1

      Seems like Android phones can outspec the iPhone in every way, including megapixels, but none that I've seen have the image quality of the iPhone camera. It's quite embarrassing how good of pictures my friends with iPhones can actually get. Mine are always noisy and blurry. Even with the LED flash. What's crazy is that even Sony, who makes the camera and camera chipset for Apple cannot even get a camera as good on their Android phones. What am I missing?

      I own a Samsung Galaxy S5 through T-Mobile. It was it's camera that sold me, 16.9 Mpix and it does indeed take great pictures.
      The rest I would post about the S5 wouldn't be praise for it's other abilities.

      What are you missing? HDR mayhaps?
      HDR https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/..., adds a lot to this quality, as without the setting pictures don't come out as well.
      Its only restriction I've found is if a light is in anywhere in the picture, it throws HDR off and ones better off turning HDR off.

      I've used HDR on a tablet and it did the same thing, great pictures even at 5 Mpix; it was a play store add on and I was sold on the first shot using it's setting.

    9. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by AmiMoJo · · Score: 2

      Indeed, the OnePlus One costs 1/3rd the price of an iPhone 6 and has an equal or better camera: http://fortheloveoftech.com/20...

      Notice how the colours on the iPhone are over-saturated. The OnePlus One gives truer colours and has RAW support, so if you like over-saturated you can either set it up as a filter in the options or just apply it later.

      As usual there is nothing magical about Apple cameras. Same sensors as everyone else has access to, and the lenses are usually similar or slightly worse due to them wanting to make the phone 0.1mm thinner this year,

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    10. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that wasn't a mistake, and honestly I seriously doubt that anyone with an iPhone -ever- asks you to take a picture because your SIII takes better pictures. Sure, Jan.

      I am constantly stunned by how good the pictures are that I take with my iPhone 6+. And I can't take pictures worth a darn with any other camera or phone. Suddenly, now I can.

      I have yet to see any Android phone that takes pictures that are anywhere close to as good. Definitely not the SIII, not even in the ballpark.

    11. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I seem to hear that out of the noob crowd saying that it has "really good quality"... it's just that they close their eyes and try to justify paying the prices being asked for for inferior hardware or turning a blind eye to the shortcomings.

      Nobody but the tech industry cares you get 4 years of updates when people buy new "free" devices every 2 years, and most don't use any of the features either. Most people just want a browser, a decent camera (they usually don't care how noisy the picture is) to post to FB and to leave on the device because they never look at the pictures after taking it. =P

    12. Re: So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by bemymonkey · · Score: 2

      And even that Nexus 6, the absolute current top-of-the-line flagship in the Android world, has a laggier camera app. And focuses more slowly.

      The gap is closing, sure, but what a phone camera needs to be is INSTANT. Keep it in memory at all times for all I care, as long as it's open within milliseconds of me tapping the button to open the camera app.

    13. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by ArsonSmith · · Score: 1

      Very interesting observation indeed. Just not my experience.

      --
      Paying taxes to buy civilization is like paying a hooker to buy love.
    14. Re:So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever gone anywhere and actually used both of those cameras?

      I have used the GS5 and the iPhone5's camera, and the actual real-world advantage towards iPhone is obvious. I admit that's a different phone, but I have heard negative reviews of the One's camera, so I'm guessing the camera is "better" in a more theoretical sense - if you hold it totally steady, cherry pick a scene, fiddle around with the autofocus, and try 50 pictures, you'll end up with a single better shot. Then post it to a dumb website like the one you link.

      Although Apple uses the same sensors, it's likely that they may end up with a "first tier" customer advantage; i.e. they get all the best binned parts because they're such a big customer. Also, the image processing software is much better. Honestly, I don't fully understand why the competitor's cameras are so much worse, but if you actually try them the difference is obvious.

  19. Crop + correction makes this pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    Rather pointless fixing edge distortions in glass when you can correct the distortion in the math and crop any edges off.

    Maybe when we had optical viewfinders, film behind the lens and no computer in the camera it was worthwhile, but fixing these effects in the lens is pointless now. The computer can do it better.

    Also consumer cameras are not blurry across the lens, your once crappy iPhone, now has a sensor featuring one of the best optical stabilizers available, better than DSLR stablization simply because it moves a tiny amount of glass far faster than the larger lens.

    The electrical characteristics of a small CMOS sensor too are far better. Your iPhone 6 is on the lastest fab process.

    Crap photos, even at ISO100, slow cameras that can only take a few shots a frame, and they pat themselves on the back when they upgrade from ancient chip fab processes?

    1. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not really, the sensor doesn't know what's in front of the camera. The closer you get with the optics the less chance there is for the processor to fail to interpret the scene correctly. Also, the more work the sensor does the more heat there is and the more heat there is the more noise and less battery life there is. Optics don't produce either to any appreciable extent.

      Reminds me of those smart sensors that would demand to make snow grey because the camera doesn't have the manual controls necessary to set it straight.

    2. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by SuperKendall · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure you can just crop off bad edges on glass. But then your glass is much larger than it needs to be, your lens is heavier than it needs to be, and larger than it needs to be.

      "Math" alone cannot fix blurred edges. It can fix things like CA or barrel distortion, but not really outright blurring, at least not to a degree that it can equal the results form a good lens.

      Good point about the REAL consumer cameras (like an iPhone) not be blurry across the lens, if that was in answer to my post I should have qualified that as consumer standalone cameras.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    3. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by walshy007 · · Score: 4, Informative

      but fixing these effects in the lens is pointless now. The computer can do it better.

      You can't fix spatial frequency response with software.

      Your picture quality is limited by the worst of the sensor and lens.

      There is no use having a kick-ass sensor with shitty optics, and no use having great optics with a shitty sensor.

      In regards to the small cameras like on the iphone 6, there are serious limitations in having a sensor so physically small. Having such a small sensor makes lens design for it a great deal easier, but you're paying the price in light collection ability and overall resolution as the system will be limited by diffraction effects far sooner.

      Large sensor sites are beneficial in many circumstances, if you have the same amount of pixels in a full 35mm frame and a 1/2.3" system, the 35mm will come off looking far better with a lens to suit.

    4. Re: Crop + correction makes this pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You clearly know nothing about optical engineering. The fastest/brightest lenses have much more glass because they in effect act like a funnel, gathering and condensing more photons from a larger surface area into a smaller one.

    5. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by houghi · · Score: 5, Funny

      All this is possible if you are just willing to use a program that understands the vocal input "Enhance!".

      --
      Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
    6. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no use having a kick-ass sensor with shitty optics, and no use having great optics with a shitty sensor.

      Actually the first case kind of make sense.
      If the cost of the sensor mainly is in development rather than in production (as is implied in the title) it will be cheaper to have the same sensor for both the low end and the high end cameras. That will increase production volume and move the time when you need to decide what to manufacture to later in the production chain.

    7. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also consumer cameras are not blurry across the lens, your once crappy iPhone, now has a sensor featuring one of the best optical stabilizers available, better than DSLR stablization simply because it moves a tiny amount of glass far faster than the larger lens.

      Lenses don't blur because of motion, so optical stabilizers have no effect. They blur because of the shape of the individual lenses meaning that light at the edge doesn't refract in the same way as in the centre. You need additional individual lenses inside the lens to compensate, which increases the cost so the cheaper consumer ones are designed to correct for it less than the more expensive ones.

    8. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by Solandri · · Score: 1

      "Math" alone cannot fix blurred edges

      This is incorrect. The process is called deconvolution.

      It's limited by your knowledge of the len's point spread function (or in the case of blurred corners and edges, how the PSF changes as you get further from the center), and the sensor's ability to accurately capture the resulting image. And you can't deconvolve close to the edges, where you're missing image data. But mathematically the process is straightforward, if processing-intensive. Technically the light field cameras are capturing a completely blurry image, which is selectively brought into focus by deconvolution.

      Also, it's easier for a tiny smartphone camera to generate images with sharp corners than a DSLR. Their lenses are so tiny you can easily (and cheaply) mold and/or grind them into aspherical shapes which reduce distortions at the edges and corners. DSLR lenses OTOH are much bigger, and thus more difficult to design and a lot more expensive to grind into the requisite shape.

    9. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by itzly · · Score: 1

      All you need is software to recognize that the subject is a cute cat, and then replace it with a similar picture from a database of professional studio-shot cats.

    10. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      There are limits to what you can correct in software. Correcting chromatic aberration greater than 2 pixels is futile. Correcting barrel or pincushion distortion reduces resolution. Sharpening images makes noise worse and introduces artifacts such as ringing. (Trying to reduce noise diminishes textures.) Software helps, but great software with a mediocre lens is inferior to mediocre software with a great lens.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    11. Re:Crop + correction makes this pointless by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Deconvolution is a tricky game. For one thing, as you mentioned, the deconvolution matrix varies across the frame, and for another, it often must be much larger than the related convolution matrix (PSF). It is often ill-conditioned (effectively, that means there's a number close to zero in the denominator), and it always magnifies noise. If there are saturated regions in the image, they can't be handled properly.

      Deconvolution and other postprocessing can improve images, but turning a grey mess into a beautiful full color photo is something that can usually be done only under tightly controlled conditions. All too often, there's something screwy in the results.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  20. No mention of crop factor WTF? by lhaeh · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Notice how the 5dMKII pics are zoomed out? That is because it is a full size sensor. Due to sensor crop, the image produced by the other two cameras gets zoomed in by a factor of 1.6 or so. Naturally, you can see more detail if it is zoomed in. Also, the reviewer is talking about having issues with camera shake while on a tripod, has he not ever heard of a remote shutter release?

    It is interesting to wonder how much process size vs. pixel density effects sensor noise, and Samsung certainly has some nice fab facilities.

    Still this reviewer seems like an idiot or a paid shill. I’ll wait for something from DPReview.

    1. Re:No mention of crop factor WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      This review is not credible. Contrary to popular thoughts, larger pixels on the image sensor give better noise values as they collect more light relative to the electrical noise. If the Samsung camera has better noise values, it is not due to the process node used for the sensors. A smaller process size would allow cramming more pixels on a sensor to get more Megapixels. That might be of use with in camera processing for noise reduction, but physics says larger pixel = more target light captured relative to noise.

      He's correlating two values, but not properly proving the causation.

    2. Re:No mention of crop factor WTF? by _merlin · · Score: 2

      The Samsung camera uses an inverted sensor, which loses less light in the silicon, so it can get lower noise with smaller pixels. It isn't a direct result of a smaller process size.

    3. Re:No mention of crop factor WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      1) Crop factor is mentioned in the title. It's sort of assumed that people know APS-C vs. 35mm Full Frame
      2) Both the 5D Mark II and A7R are full frame -- the A7R just has more pixel density.

      3) It's the combination of inverted sensor *AND* process size. Image quality is always signal-to-noise ratio. The inverted sensor increases the signal because the circuitry doesn't get in the way. So for a given sensor density more of it available.

      Noise is where process technology comes into play.
      Every time you read off the sensor, there is read noise. This is where the process technology helps.
      Thermal noise is another part. The hotter the semiconductor runs, the more e- there are to trigger the pixels. This is where process technology helps.
      Dark current is another part. This is where process technology helps (but this only matters for long exposures)

      This is why the 1D Mark1 with giant pixels isn't good anymore. Quantum efficiency has improved, noise has been reduced.

      http://www.clarkvision.com/articles/digital.sensor.performance.summary/

      is good slashdot worthy technical discussion.

    4. Re:No mention of crop factor WTF? by Tasha26 · · Score: 1

      Still this reviewer seems like an idiot or a paid shill. ...wait for something from DPReview.

      THIS.

    5. Re:No mention of crop factor WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So does the Sony, I'll assume you don't know what Exmor implied on on the Sony sensor.

  21. Re:Who cares would still buy a Canon by AK+Marc · · Score: 2

    And when all the Canons and Nikons use Samsung sensors, what will you do?

  22. Um by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You WANT bigger sensor sites in a digital camera, not smaller. Smaller makes for crappier dynamic range and more noise.

  23. Still waiting for the obvious by ankhank · · Score: 2

    Someone, some day, will make a digital camera the size of a 35mm film cassette, with a pullout sensor the size of a 35mm film strip that fits over the sprockets on the film plane of the good film cameras. Make it Bluetooth or wifi-controllable. For the viewfinder-impaired, put a display driver on the takeup reel side and a stick-on display on the back; reinterpret the film advance lever action. The utterly obvious stuff.

    Why not yet? We don't *ing* need disposable cameras, and there are plenty of good robust ones that will last another century.

    1. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      a new affordable back would complete this.
      it doesn't resolve the fact that the older lenses
      in your collection are not 'digital' and there are
      differences that matter in this respect.

    2. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      After using a mirrorless camera with a good EVF, you couldn't pay me to use an antiquated optical viewfinder.

    3. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      get a digital back and Medium format camera system. they are expensive, but god damn, the quality you can get is insane. A friend lent me one for a few days a while back and i still get comments on the photos about the "clarity" etc.

      But yeah, be prepared to drop like $30,000.

        Also, you know that this was tried ages ago right?Kodak did it back in the 80's i'm not sure any companies made it past the prototype stages. Too much trouble.

    4. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They didn't pull out like film, but in the olden days, you could get "camera backs" for 4x5, 35mm, and others... but you can do so much more digitally:
          a) Sensor Shift stabilization
          b) Sensor vibration dust removal
          c) Live View (though I really wish I could get a split pentaprism effect)
      and much more....

    5. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by kylemonger · · Score: 2

      It came and went; you missed it (sort of).

      http://cultureandcommunication...

      The closest thing to your idea that actually existed was the Digital Modul R back for Leica R8 and R9 SLRs. Even this was a white elephant compared to Canon's full frame cameras at the time. Photographers would buy a Canon 1-series camera and take a Dremel to the mirror so they could fit Leica R lenses on it, rather than deal with the Modul R.

    6. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by thegarbz · · Score: 2

      They tried that. Didn't work. There's a whole lot more electronics than a simple sensor that goes into a digital camera. The result was big and bulky and didn't work very well.

    7. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you mean like this?

      http://www.f-stopeight.com/converting-film-cameras-to-digital-efs-1-the-technology-that-almost-was/

      yeah, it didn't make it.... good idea, but not cost effective and was quickly obsoleted..

    8. Re:Still waiting for the obvious by Cederic · · Score: 1

      The new Pentax 645z is bloody gorgeous, and (by medium format standards) relatively affordable.

      The camera alone though weighs more than my camera and any three of my lenses. Some serious compromises needed to get that quality..

  24. Advantages of using samsung by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    sewa dehumidifier for samsung its abit easy to use because it connected with google and this is a good item to use

  25. Innovation beats the competition ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    .. and Canon/Nikon hasn't done much innovation with their cameras if you compare the advances in other technology related areas.
    And this is exactly where Samsung can enter the market.

  26. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by davmoo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Camera bodies are indeed temporary, but they are still important. I shoot high school gymnastics. During the season, which started a couple weeks ago, I regularly shoot 4000 to 5000 images at each meet, and there will be 12 meets this season. I know my Canon 7D can take that kind of use week in and week out, and its on its third season now. That Samsung may take pretty photos, but it has no track record for dependability. If one were handed to me I'd use it for day-to-day "walking around town" shots, but I won't even consider using it as a main shooter at a gymnastics meet until its been out long enough, at least a couple of years, to have a reputation for taking heavy usage.

    Yes, to answer other comments I've seen on this story, when you buy Canon (and Nikon) you're paying a premium for the name. But you're also buying a decades-long reputation of dependable cameras that can do the job and won't let you down. I'm willing to pay a premium for a quality camera body that I know I can depend on. Samsung has a long way to go before it has that kind of reputation in the camera market.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  27. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by bhcompy · · Score: 1

    If the lens is great, I'm sticking it on my Rollei

  28. Poor Japan by gophther · · Score: 1

    Korea is even making better lenses than Japan is now. Boggles the mind.

    1. Re: Poor Japan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What Korean companies are making great lenses? Samsung has 1 or 2. Saman has some good values, but nothing truly great. Nikon, Canon, Pentax, Olympus, Sony, Fuji, Sigma, and Tamron have literally hundreds of great lebses between them.

      Stupid comment.

  29. Sony Xperia Z3 is one of the best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sony's Xperia Z3 is one of the best smartphone cameras there are. Same stacked pixel sensor with optical stabilization. But yep, iPhone does have a lot of nice post processing software in the camera. Particular the software layer of the stabilization is just excellent particular with video.

    BUT, YOU WILL BE FLAMED.

    See, a lot of the photographers here have a 35mm DSLR camera, and dream of having a full frame sensor (= they are the mainframe programmers of old). And there are a lot of negatives with a large sensor, not least the huge lenses. So they're carrying a huge crap camera and scoff rather unconvincingly at your puny iPhone 6.

    Yet for all but low light/high zoom situations, your photos will be better. So just nod at the mainframe programmer and smile knowingly.

    1. Re: Sony Xperia Z3 is one of the best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can you control depth of field with your cameraphone? No. Are you aware that it's a small crappy sensor behind a small crappy lens? Idiot.

    2. Re:Sony Xperia Z3 is one of the best by Cederic · · Score: 1

      Yet for all but low light/high zoom situations, your photos will be better.

      Only a tenth of my photography is high zoom. Half of it is low-light. Some of it is high shutter speed. Half of it gets post processing that may pull/push, change colour balance, probably crop (due to my shite framing) and otherwise tweak the photograph. The rest is a mix of snapshots I could use my phone for and photographs that came out of the camera already looking good.

      Could I use a smartphone camera for all that lot? No. Does that make me a mainframe programmer? No.

      I think that makes you a prejudiced blinkered idiot.

  30. Yes, here's why by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter how good the sensor, camera, or lens are really - because the entire non-smartphone camera market is shrinking rapidly.

    How can Samsung hope to make back the R&D costs of making even a great sensor, camera, and series of lenses? Where will the customers come from? It will take YEARS to pry even marginally serious photographers away from the systems they are already invested in.

    It's like having an ocean shrink to a small pool, seeing a writhing mass of sharks within, then putting on a shark costume and yelling "I'm a shark too!" jumping in the pool.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Yes, here's why by cheater512 · · Score: 1

      Where do you think the smart phone sensor tech starts from?

      Doing neat new stuff in the big sensors is easier than trying to do it from scratch in tiny sensors.
      This applies to everything. Car companies do all their R&D on massive sports cars which don't make a profit. A few years later the regular cars get some of the benefits.

    2. Re:Yes, here's why by dgatwood · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It doesn't matter how good the sensor, camera, or lens are really - because the entire non-smartphone camera market is shrinking rapidly.

      I think you're misinterpreting the numbers. The market at the low end is contracting because cell phones are cutting into it. The market at the high end is contracting because neither Canon nor Nikon is really innovating much. If each generation has only small, incremental improvements, people are going to upgrade their gear less and less frequently.

      Nobody is replacing their DSLRs with cell phones, within some small epsilon. At best, cell phones can replace DSLRs for outdoor portrait photography, when you're within a few feet from the subject. On the opposite extreme, if you try to use a cell phone to take photos of your kid's stage play, you'll annoy everyone by standing up in the front row, and you'll still only get shots with blown-out faces that are six pixels by six pixels in size and so severely smeared by motion blur that nobody would be recognizable even if you could fix those first three problems.... All the while, the parent with the real camera might be taking amazing close-ups with a 300mm (or longer) lens on a full-frame camera from the back of the auditorium.

      Of course, half the time, the parent with the real camera has a lens that's too short to be usable and hasn't learned enough about the camera to avoid getting blown-out shots. Unfortunately, some of those folks get discouraged and never upgrade their gear. Fortunately, there's a steady supply of people who can't be bothered to learn the basics, so them getting discouraged isn't a big problem market-wise. :-)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

  31. Sensors are only part of the equation by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It takes a good sensor, a good lens, some skill and even some luck to create a decent photo.

    I'll withhold judgement on the Samsung claims until the sensors have been properly tested in the field.
    That said, there is a reason pro lenses cost so damn much. Five years from now, my top end lenses will still be worth every penny I paid for them, while I probably wouldn't even be able to GIVE away the DSLR body. A whole lot of optical engineering goes into lens design. Especially the high end glass. If there is a cheaper way to do it without sacrificing quality, Canon and Nikon would really like to talk to you about it.

    Someone asked why the 300mm/2.8 lens was significant. The reason for it is the 300mm/2.8 and the 70-200mm/2.8 lenses are pretty much lenses that set the bar or standard for optical clarity, so to speak, for both the Nikon and Canon camps.

    Yes, tiny sensors can achieve better magnification with less glass than their full sized counterparts, however, this normally comes at the price of noise since you're packing all those mega-pixels into a much smaller footprint. Don't get me wrong, in perfect lighting ( say ISO 100 ) it'll probably make a really nice image. In the real world, however, perfect lighting rarely exists outside the studio. This is where low light capability and low noise sensors pull away from the camera wannabe's. It's more or less a balancing act between low light and noise.

    If they want to impress me, show me what the camera can do when the light goes crappy on you and you need to push the ISO above 3200. This is where the full frames really start to flex their muscle. Show me what the image looks like edge to edge when this sensor is paired with decent glass. How's the bokeh ? Chromatic Aberration ? If you can impress me with the first few, now you need to build an inventory of lenses I can choose from depending on what I'm shooting. Portrait, landscape, macro, sports, wildlife, etc. One size doth not fit all here. Don't forget all the other goodies that go into this very, very expensive hobby. Flashes, tele-converters, filters, etc. etc.

    Someone mentioned how silly it is to " get it right in the camera when we can do it all post ".

    The idea is sound, IF you shoot one or two photos. OTOH, the reason you get it right in the camera is so you don't have to spend so much damn time fixing things in post. So, if you just shot up 1000 images for a wedding or your vacation or whatever, trust me when I tell you that reviewing them all in Lightroom is bad enough. Having to apply various fixes to compensate for silly oversights you SHOULD have done in camera is just annoying as hell.

    In the end, it still takes a lot of skill and a bit of luck to pull of a shot to be proud of. The tech will only get you so far.

    1. Re: Sensors are only part of the equation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Har har har you stupid old man with your quaint cameras. Our iPhones and whatever take better quality pictures than any high-end full-frame camera. Who cares about depth of field and white balance or RAW processing. We computer nerds know anything. Har har har. Now let's jerk off.

    2. Re:Sensors are only part of the equation by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      Someone asked why the 300mm/2.8 lens was significant. The reason for it is the 300mm/2.8 and the 70-200mm/2.8 lenses are pretty much lenses that set the bar or standard for optical clarity, so to speak, for both the Nikon and Canon camps.

      According to DXOMark, the top scoring lenses for both the Canon 1Dx and the Nikon 810E are both made by Carl Zeiss-- e.g Carl Zeiss Apo Planar T* Otus 85mm F14 ZF.2.

      The top scoring Canon is, indeed, the 2.8 300mm. But Nikon's best lens is the 2.0 200mm. Now, it has a 2.8 400mm and 2.8 300mm that are almost as good-- but it has a number of portrait lenses up there as well.

      (The 70-200mm zooms are almost second rate in comparison. Besides, people have accused the Nikkor of being slightly short.)

      If you're a sports photographer, I suppose I understand why you might judge a lens manufacturer on the basis of its 300mm f 2.8. But that's not necessarily the most exquisitely designed lens in the lineup.

    3. Re:Sensors are only part of the equation by Greyfox · · Score: 1

      Ooh! I was just reading about this! Dunno if any of that work will actually result in a product that can get better results from simpler lenses, though.

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    4. Re:Sensors are only part of the equation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DxO 'Top Scoring' doesn't mean a whole lot. First off, they numbers they use are baked hard not documented. Second, the 'numbers' of the top tier lenses are all within 10-15% of each other which means you won't be able to tell the difference unless you've got a loupe on a large print.

      I'm not sure why Samsung thinks that the 300 2.8 is going to set themselves up for eternity - my guess is that they will try to debut it at the Korean Olympics and a 300 2.8 is a good all around Olympics lens. But it's not all that popular and it's damned expensive.

      Methinks somebody's ego is wrapped up in this. It makes little financial sense.

    5. Re:Sensors are only part of the equation by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Except I want a mirror-less design (and preferably with in camera stabilization but maybe that doesn't work due to the possibly even shorter physical lens to sensor distance) I'd gladly take a five year old camera body.

      Just saying.

  32. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Only gadget guys obsessed with numbers would buy a Samsung camera. Photographers just don't care about nm and megapixels.

    You got Frist Psot! Yippppppeeeee for you!

  33. Good thing we don't rely on only one reviewer by Tasha26 · · Score: 0

    Thank god many Youtubers have done hands-on reviews of this NX1 and found it very lacking or subpar.

    I will need SLR Lounge to make full disclosure on who their partners are because we live in an era where we cannot even trust Tech/Games reviewers as being honest! Also Samsung was known to fake 3D benchmark reviews so their copycat phones would sell. That's kinda low.

  34. Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or not by BBF_BBF · · Score: 0

    Sigh.

    SLR (single lens reflex) has a mirror, with either a pentaprism or pentamirror (where you stick your eyeball) to show you the view as it is through the lens.

    SLR = Single Lens Reflex
    Technically, this does not signify the requirement of a mirror or not. It just specifies that the picture is exposed using the same lens that is used for framing.

    It's just that when there were ONLY film cameras, the only practical way to build an SLR camera was to use a mirror.
    Also note that technically "SLR" does not specify the requirement for interchangeable lenses either, so technically an SLR can have a fixed non-interchangeable lens.

    But most SLR 35mm film cameras had mirrors and interchangeable lenses.

    And when digitial sensors came along, the most compatible way to create a high end digital camera was just to replace the film back with a digital sensor, and all the existing lenses could be used without modification.

    Thus the common definition of "DSLR" is an interchangeable lens single lens reflex camera with an optical viewfinder with a digital sensor in a configuration similar to a film SLR.

    But if the Technical definition of letters that make up "DSLR" is used:"Digital Single Lens Reflex" even a cell phone can be considered a DSLR.

  35. How long will Samsung will support the camera? by cpotoso · · Score: 2
    How long will Samsung will support the camera?

    Almost every device from Samsung I've owned lost support as soon as a newer device/os came along. I would not touch this company for anything I expect to use for longer than 2 years.

  36. Re: Gadget guys vs photographers by davmoo · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Then the parents are in on it too, seeing as how they pay me to take the photos and all. The local paper is in trouble too, since they occasionally print my photos.

    Please feel free to go fuck yourself. You're probably the only partner you can get. Actually your hand probably even rejects you.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  37. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    +1. 100% agreed. Of course, everybody knows that glass is top importance, but bodies are important too when doing professional. Note that the 7D is also usually the body of choice for (canon-oriented) photojournalists for the reasons you stated.

    One small additional note: Yes you pay premium for the brands but you also buy resell value. So, there is a steep initial curve but not so bad after.

  38. I'd take the Samsung check by tjstork · · Score: 1

    So a well funded player rolls out a new camera missing a feature its established and highly regarded competitors have, and a web site gives them a great review. Dang, why didn't I have that domain name! I should write bad reviews of the new Samsung and wait for the next model and ask for a reviewers copy. I ought to get some spending cash then!

    --
    This is my sig.
  39. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by davmoo · · Score: 1

    Actually I hadn't thought of resale value, although that is an advantage for many and a very good point. I didn't think about it because I tend to use camera bodies until they start shedding parts :)

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  40. Re: Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Posting as AC 'cause I'm in a similar position. For years I've been paid to take stills and video of kids at school plays, musicals, sports days, amateur drama, school graduations and other events. I've built a reputation among parents and teachers as someone who CAN be trusted, yet there are people^W trolls on internet forums who can't handle the fact that there are some of us who AREN'T pervs. Sad, really, but I get paid to practice my skills, and they get to play with themselves.

  41. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by sixshot · · Score: 2

    Makes sense that people stick with the companies that has reliable and dependable products. Yet in the end, someone has to be the guinea pig when a newcomer arrives. Most won't touch it. But somewhere out there, someone's going to pick up the duty and do the dirty work for ya.

  42. Raspberry pi by basilmepits · · Score: 0

    Check how to install xbmc on raspberry pi How to install XBMC on Raspberry Pi

  43. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The advantage to mirrorless is the lack of front/back focus relative to traditional SLRs. Right now, the Samsung is fast for daylight AF but still hunts in low light. Still, it's 15 fps. It's good enough to be competitive with the 1Dx believe it or not -- I have the 1D Mark IIn which had better brightlight focusing than the 1D3 or 1D4 (the whole Rob Galbraith series of articles). The 300/2.8 will be Samsung's make-or-break lens for the industry.

    Good glass is critical, but Sigma has come out of nowhere with brilliant results as have Sony (with the FE Zeiss primes). I think the 16-50/2-2.8 compares very well against the 17-55/2.8 EF-S -- it's just not as good as teh 24-70/L II.

    The Samsung 50-150 and 300 will be true tests of whether the NX platform itself is valuable imho.

    Then, as you say, what will Samsung be doing in 5 years? That's the biggest gamble..

  44. Yet sensors have improved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The sensors have moved on massively since then. CCDs have gone, largely replaced by CMOS, CMOS was replaced by backlit cmos which improves noise response.

    Now we have STACKED pixels, with the colors stacked onto each other. Again it substantially reduces the area needed. By shrinking the lens they shrunk the glass, and by shrinking the glass, it shrinks the light the glass absorbs.

    We're at the stage now, where those night-time star photos are not as good as my 1inch G7X produces. In a few years time, a 6mm sensor like the smartphones have will be able to do that.

    Then there's the glass, too many corrective lenses fixing aberrations and barrel distortions and so on. All of that glass adding weight, size and cutting some of the light. Why? The camera can do that in software. Ditch the u

    All these improvements have enabled smaller cameras, and better cameras, but DSLR seem stuck in a timewarp.

    You are happy with an f2.8 lens? Seriously? If they could make a f1.8 or faster lens without making it insanely big, they would. It's a compromise and not necessary with the better sensors/smaller bodies.

    1. Re:Yet sensors have improved by Golden_Rider · · Score: 1

      Then there's the glass, too many corrective lenses fixing aberrations and barrel distortions and so on. All of that glass adding weight, size and cutting some of the light. Why? The camera can do that in software.

      So you say software in the camera can summon up image detail which was lost due to crappy lenses which e.g. produce an unsharp image in the corners of a picture?

      Barrel distortion - yes, something like that can be fixed, if you measure all the possible camera body/lens combinations (e.g dxoptics). Loss of detail? Nah, that only happens in movies when people say "enhance picture!".

      Look e.g. at the differences in sharpness in this test (e.g. the newspaper pictures), and these are all high end primes (yes, some of them are specifically for low light shots). Now imagine what a cheapo lens will do.

      http://3d-kraft.de/index.php?o...

    2. Re:Yet sensors have improved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I can't tell if you're trolling or merely completely clueless. But I'll humor you anyway.

      The sensors have moved on massively since then. CCDs have gone, largely replaced by CMOS, CMOS was replaced by backlit cmos which improves noise response.

      Now we have STACKED pixels, with the colors stacked onto each other. Again it substantially reduces the area needed.

      1) The only vendor selling cameras with stacked pixel sensors today is Sigma. Stacked pixel sensor today delivers good images in base ISO, and then completely falls apart when you knock it up a few stops. None of the image processor software is ready for stacked pixels either.

      2) Stacked pixels doesn't do jack about "area needed." What it does do is avoid the artifacting effect introduced by the traditional Bayer layout of pixels.

      We're at the stage now, where those night-time star photos are not as good as my 1inch G7X produces. In a few years time, a 6mm sensor like the smartphones have will be able to do that.

      What you need for night-time star photos is the ability to withstand thermal noise from long exposure, which is a different requirement from most normal type of photography. Your G7X, while a great piece of technology in a small package, will get slaughtered by even entry-class DSLRs in situations that really do call for high sensitivity, such as indoor sports.

      Then there's the glass, too many corrective lenses fixing aberrations and barrel distortions and so on. All of that glass adding weight, size and cutting some of the light. Why? The camera can do that in software. Ditch the u

      You speak of this like it's a revelation, but it's already done in software on many compact cameras, including your G7X. But when you compare the image quality to optical correction, you can tell the software isn't there yet.

      All these improvements have enabled smaller cameras, and better cameras, but DSLR seem stuck in a timewarp.

      You are happy with an f2.8 lens? Seriously? If they could make a f1.8 or faster lens without making it insanely big, they would. It's a compromise and not necessary with the better sensors/smaller bodies.

      1) You need large aperture on smaller bodies for sharp image because small sensor=smaller focal length=smaller aperture size at any given f value=diffraction kicks in faster because it's only affected by absolute size of the aperture. Full frame DSLRs don't have to worry about diffraction until well past f/10; medium format go well past f/22. That's why full frame users are happy with f/4 or even f/5.6 zooms, when such an aperture would be unacceptable in a high-end compact camera.

      2) You also need large aperture on smaller bodies for low noise because their ISO characteristics are worse than large sensors.

      3) To get back into topic, Samsung lenses aren't much smaller than APS-C based DSLR counterparts, and all of that is attributable to the shorter flange distance. For telephoto lenses there is virtually no size savings.

    3. Re: Yet sensors have improved by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      You are happy with an f2.8 lens? Seriously? If they could make a f1.8 or faster lens without making it insanely big, they would. It's a compromise and not necessary with the better sensors/smaller bodies.

      Sigma has recently released a f 1.8 zoom lens. It's merely the 17-35mm range, though. f2.8 is useful because many of the existing bodies have focal points that are extra precise at f 2.8 or faster. So if a photographer uses the existing "holy trinities", that functionality is never lost. As for faster apertures,

      Nikon does have a 200 mm f/2.0 that is big, heavy, and expensive. It once produced a 300 mm f2.0 that had those three qualities in spades. Apparently, they were quite useful in cinematography, and many of them were converted to different mounts.

      The problem with long, ultrafast lenses is math.

      Want a f2.0 85mm lens?The effective aperture must have a diameter of 42.5mm.
      Want a f2.0 300mm lens? The effective aperture must have a diameter of 150 mm.

      And of course, the front element must be large enough to let that much light through-- the afforementioned 300 mm lens has a 160mm front thread-- big, and heavy. (Photographers have slightly different expectations about the 400mm 2.8 lens, which requires a similarly sized effective aperture.)

  45. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by dunkelfalke · · Score: 2

    Correct me if i am wrong, but doesn't the "reflex" part indeed imply a mirror?

    --
    "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  46. Re: Who cares would still buy a Canon by dunkelfalke · · Score: 1

    There is always Sigma with their own Foveon

    --
    "It's such a fine line between stupid and clever" -- David St. Hubbins, Spinal Tap
  47. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

    "Technically," you apparently have no idea what the word "reflex" means. You also apparently have no idea what a rolling shutter is, and the "rolling shutter" effect often talked about wrt digital camera video is only called that because the slow sensor readout mimics the same kind of jelly effects caused by a real rolling shutter in film cinema cams.

    TL, DR: you are a moron

  48. Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or not by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    christ, listen to people who know what they are talking about. the "reflex" in SLR refers to a mirror.

  49. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Megapixels are already there, there is no need for more. This actually also holds true for lens sharpness. Those pixel peepers haven't even seen a photographer, unless they saw one at a wedding or on TV.

    The things pros look for are autofocus (speed, sharpness, repeatability), weight (they are not just snapping one photo now and then), durability (it's a tool), usability (good buttons in right places), good support, weather sealing(maybe not if you are a studio photographer..), lens availability (doesn't matter if you have the best body in the world if it doesn't have enough suitable lenses available), viewfinder quality (the electronic ones are almost good enough, and will eventually kill mirrors and prisms), etc. Good photoshop/lightroom integration is also a big bonus.

    You just know a comparision or review is made by some camera tech nerd instead of a photographer when they zoom down to pixel level to to make comparisons on things that matter very little.

  50. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by stud9920 · · Score: 1

    . I shoot high school gymnastics. During the season, which started a couple weeks ago, I regularly shoot 4000 to 5000 images at each meet,

    Not really on topic, but I have a backlog of about 100k first person sports pictures that I never ever look at, because they all look similar (5s or 10s auto shoot) and I have never found software that allow to quickly and effectively select which to keep and which to toss. What software do you use for that purpose ?

  51. So we'll get a camara as good as the iPhone? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You are missing Nokia, may their camera phones rest in peace.

    In truth, the new Lumias have super good cameras. But.. well, if you hate microsoft and windows in your phone that's kind of a deal breaker.

  52. Re:Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...or a prism...

  53. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by SoulNibbler · · Score: 4, Informative

    With respect the the Samsung:
    Autofocus: good in bright light, passable in low light, it really is better than the old canons (5Dii) in mid-low light. Nowhere near the newest AF SLRs. There is no good way to control focus in C-AF mode.
    Weight: Very nice! Even with the 16-50 f2-2.8.
    Durability: Appears to be at or above the 5Diii level. Not quite as overbuilt as an D810. It feels basically like a 7D.
    Usability: Complete garbage! Nice button placement but boneheaded firmware. In video mode, we let it slide because the video is so awesome.
    Support: 2 Firmware updates already, new ones on the way (sadly these ones are video focused).
    Weather Sealing: S lenses are gasketed, body appears robust. We won't know till someone tears one down though.
    Lenses: 24-70 eq available and quite good. 70-230 eq reportedly of similar quality sharp and fast. Neither are landscape lenses. 85mm f1.4 (135mm eq) check, very sharp very corrected a bit high on CA but its a system of lenses that are supposed to be software corrected. 60mm macro check. 30mm pancake check. UWA zoom check minus.
    Viewfinder Quality: A new standard as far as latency, good sharpness as compared to A7.
    Lightroom support out of the box: It includes a copy of lightroom! Sadly no Capture One support other than through an included DNG converter.
    At the moment it really is an astounding 4k video camera.
    Stills are good enough for events, there are reports of sports working fine if you can fill the frame. Its a PITA for slow fine arts stuff because of wide open focusing and a nerfed AF-S mode.

  54. MOD PARENT UP by lhaeh · · Score: 1

    I don't see crop factor mentioned anywhere in the title, interesting stuff about sensor noise though.

  55. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I take awesome shots by taping my $2k lens to a potato.

  56. Re: Gadget guys vs photographers by davmoo · · Score: 4, Informative

    (I don't normally reply to ACs, but three of you bring up good points, which outweighs the one asshole.)

    Actually, no on the toe. Of course there are shots where the gymnast is in a type of pose that doesn't need to be immortalized in a photograph. You'll get that in any sport where the standard method of shooting is "spray and pray" (set the camera on continuous shooting, hold down the button as the gymnast starts a flip, and pray you get a good printable shot at the peak of the flip). And yes, I go through and make sure those don't go out in the wild. But in all honesty, I've never seen a camel toe shot in the schools I shoot at. High school leotards are designed to prevent just that sort of thing. If a high school gymnast is showing toe, then the coach did a really poor job of selecting leotards for the team.

    As for the "reasonable suspicion" part, no it really isn't. You'll see more skin at any public beach (and probably most shopping malls in the summer) than you will at a high school gymnastics meet. And most gymnastics meets are so lightly attended that the parents and coaches generally know quickly if anyone suspicious is showing up. If someone unknown shows up and just starts taking photos, someone else is going to ask questions. I started out by taking photos of a family member and her friends on the team 8 years ago, I didn't just randomly walk in off the street with a camera and start shooting. There's also the part, at least in my state, where one must obtain permission from the school principal or the state sanctioning body (depends on particular meet) to distribute the photos commercially. And finally, getting good gymnastics photos is not a cheap endeavor, nor is it something you're going to learn overnight. You're generally in a very large room with piss poor lighting and a strictly enforced rule of no flash photography, and photograph is only allowed in certain areas if you're shooting from the actual gym floor and not the stands. You ain't going to get even passable shots with an entry level camera you bought the day before a meet, a kit lens, and the camera set on "Programmed". A pedo isn't going to devote that much time, money, and effort to something that only lasts 12 weeks a year.

    --
    I want a new quote. One that won't spill. One that don't cost too much. Or come in a pill.
  57. 35mm full frame sensors? Puny. :-) by PeeAitchPee · · Score: 1

    Interesting that there's no mention of Nikon's top 36MP chip in their new D810.

    However, even that's wimpy. Take look at any of Phase One's medium format digital backs in 50, 60, or 80 megapixels, with the world's highest resolution and widest dynamic range in any commercially available camera system. They're generally used with the world's best German lenses, like Schneider and Rodenstock This is what pro fashion, product, landscape, and repro shooters use when money is no object.

  58. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The "reflex" part does indeed imply a shutter (optional on digital cameras now). But the reflex of a shutter needn't be a mirror.

    This is not correct. The reflex in (D)SLR and TLR relates to the fact that a mirror is used for viewing the scene.

  59. Re:Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or no by dvdungeon · · Score: 1

    Sigh.

    SLR (single lens reflex) has a mirror, with either a pentaprism or pentamirror (where you stick your eyeball) to show you the view as it is through the lens.

    SLR = Single Lens Reflex Technically, this does not signify the requirement of a mirror or not. It just specifies that the picture is exposed using the same lens that is used for framing. .

    Not so sure about that... depends on how you define the meaning of 'reflex'. The 'reflex' can refer either to the use of a mirror (as in reflection and is the meaning for a TLR) or the automatic removal of the mirror (as in reflex action) when taking the shot. Probably both for SLR and DSLR. Take the mirror out of the equation and you just a SL without the R.

    --
    oops...
  60. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Bob+the+Super+Hamste · · Score: 2

    While pixel count matters we have probably already crossed into the realm where lenses are going to be more important for picture quality than pixel count unless you have a Hasselblad with a full frame digital back. Most people understand megapixels and for a long time a higher count meant you would get better pictures but as soon as you mention diffraction limits you have lost them. This was something that I was taught about years ago in high school in the photography class using Pentax K1000s and ISO100 black and white film with the general rule that for crisp pictures don't stop the lens down beyond f/8. There are exceptions like you really want a very high depth of focus or you are doing a very long exposure but you understood why you were doing those things.

    The GP is also right in that now days camera chassis are fairly disposable unless you are looking at the very high end ones. I still have my Pentax Spotmatic F with close to a full complement of good lenses (looking for an M42 screw mount 17mm fisheye and 400-500mm range telephoto at reasonable prices) and as long as the camera shop near me exists I will keep on using it. My wife however is on her 4th digital camera in 10 years as they just don't last even though my SpotmaticF has been exposed to substantially harsher conditions while I have owned it for almost the last 20 years.

    --
    Time to offend someone
  61. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by The+Grim+Reefer · · Score: 1

    So if the lens is great, you don't care if you use it with an old ~1 megapixel camera with a noisy sensor that requires long exposure times in reasonable light settings? Countering the idea that megapixels don't matter isn't the same as saying they are the only thing that matters.

    Exactly how many 1 megapixels cameras like you described does Canon or Nikon have in their current available DSLR model line? I think the lowest is the $400 Rebel T3 at 12 MP. Everything else is 18 or higher.

    The Canon 1D was 4MP from back in 2001. The 10D was 6MP and released in 2003. While neither of those would be fantastic by today's standards, they still aren't as bad as what you described. I still shoot using a Canon 40D at 10MP fairly often. It's smaller and lighter than a full frame camera.

  62. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

    It's funny that you should mention the number of exposures and reference a 7D (a DSLR, with a mirror that needs to flip up for EVERY SINGLE SHOT!) in comparison with a MILC camera, which has far fewer moving parts.

  63. Re:35mm full frame sensors? Puny. :-) by nehumanuscrede · · Score: 1

    The medium-formats excel in a studio environment or where lighting is predictable. Not so much in low light levels nor for high speed photography. Two different systems really designed for different shooting environments. I wouldn't dream of trying to outperform a medium-format setup in a studio with a DSLR. I'd get laughed out of the room. lol

    Like you said, they have higher resolution and better dynamic range. That comes at a cost though . . . . . speed.

    Let's go outside and start shooting birds in flight, or any sports venue and my DSLR will run circles around the medium-format system.

    I would love a medium-format camera for studio work, but they suffer from what I consider elitist pricing. When you consider a Phase One will cost about the same as a mid-range luxury car ( $~50,000 ) for the BODY ONLY, you tend to limit your client base a bit. ( Ask Silicon Graphics how that ultimately ends when only a few can afford your hardware )

    As a result, I don't even consider the medium-formats a realistic option for me :D

    I'll agree with you though, for the environment in which they were designed, medium-format trounces DSLR's.

  64. SOmewhat true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tested a Samsung NX10 in 2010 and was mostly impressed by the LED in the back.
    They have a APSC sensor, which is the standard in most amatuer cameras, and that should be enough for most people, except when you want real wide angles.
    Lenses are very good (Schneiders I believe) and while the whole mirrorless concept intrigued me I did not buy into it

    The images I took that day were mostly of the stuff in the demo day but they were sharp, nice color transmission and the processing (digital) was well done.
    The 14MP of that camera was enough for me, and there was little moire and aliasing
    I assume in 4 years they have advanced quite a lot and the sensor /post process is better

    If they had joined the micro 4/3rds group then it would be a lot easier to compare apples to apples, comparing it to largest sensors is mostly useless.

  65. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by tlhIngan · · Score: 1

    It's funny that you should mention the number of exposures and reference a 7D (a DSLR, with a mirror that needs to flip up for EVERY SINGLE SHOT!) in comparison with a MILC camera, which has far fewer moving parts.

    And yet the flip up mirror has been going strong for many decades now for millions of shots in very rough conditions.

    Surprisingly it's one of the more reliable mechanical technologies out there that works with practically zero maintenance despite harsh conditions, being tossed around, vibration, and very small precise mechanical parts.

    Most pro photographers probably run many tens of thousands of shots through their cameras every year or so, with each one orchestrating a mirror that flips up and a shutter that rolls across the sensor (mechanical). Granted, there aren't as many gears, springs and other contraptions as of the old unpowered SLRs in the film era since it's all electronically orchestrated, but DSLRs have been proven quite reliable.

  66. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by bemymonkey · · Score: 1

    You're forgetting that even pro level cameras have mirror/shutter mechanisms rated for just a few 100k flips. I'm a DSLR shooter too, but I have no illusions about the durability of a mirror+shutter mechanism.

  67. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by AK+Marc · · Score: 0

    The reflex relates to a shutter of any type. The fact that at the time the only means to do so at the time the terms were invented was with a mirror doesn't change the meaning of the constituent words. reflex meant shutter, no more. The shutter was a mirror. At the time did they have a shutter behind the mirror, or use the mirror as the shutter? https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    They obviously have a shutter behind the mirrors now. But my understanding is that in the Old Days, when those terms were coined, the mirror was part of the shutter system. This means that the "reflex" could mean only the shutter, and the mirror was the shutter, causing confusion for us 10 years later.

    That and the point of TLR is that you didn't need the complicated mirror system. The mirror is used to have a viewfinder that's linked to the imaging. With TLR you have separate imaging, no mirror. So by definition, the R in TLR *can't* refer to a mirror.

  68. Re: Who cares would still buy a Canon by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    And Sony will likely continue with Sony sensors. But the AC specifically said "Canon" who doesn't use their own sensors, and is a candidate for buying a better sensor from the likes of Samsung or others.

  69. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by sexconker · · Score: 1

    Megapixels are already there, there is no need for more.

    So very wrong.
    A 40 MP sensor (which yields less than 40 million pixels of output) won't even get 1200 DPI on a 8"x5" print.

  70. Informative as it is irrelevant by SuperKendall · · Score: 2

    This is incorrect. The process is called deconvolution.

    Yes, I know about that...

    It's limited by your knowledge of the len's point spread function

    Which varies per lens and is different across the whole lens so GAME OVER MAN.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  71. Lots of people are replacing SLR cameras by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Nobody is replacing their DSLRs with cell phones, within some small epsilon.

    Quite a few people are, which is why the market is shrinking rapidly. Especially at the low end, which you just said...

    if you try to use a cell phone to take photos of your kid's stage play, you'll annoy everyone by standing up in the front row

    I've done just that - only from the back row. You can easily attach teleconverters if you want zoom, and frankly lots of people are willing to use digital zoom also. The result you get is much better than the 6x6 pixel thing you describe, even with digital zoom. The fact you can attach external lenses makes a smartphone as versatile as a DSLR to someone that would have only had one or two lenses anyway.

    I also have a DSLR, and a lot of lenses. But I also use the iPhone for photography a lot because it is REALLY GOOD at that. Between custom software and an really excellent sensor, there are a number of times where honestly the iPhone is absolutely the best camera for the image at hand, and of course it is always with me which is the first requirement for taking good pictures.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:Lots of people are replacing SLR cameras by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      I've done just that - only from the back row. You can easily attach teleconverters if you want zoom ...

      Okay, six pixels was an exaggeration—in a small hall, by my math (based on photos I've taken with other cameras), an 8MP iPhone would yield faces ranging from 26 to 50 pixels tall. With a 6D, a full-pixel crop at 40mm isn't great, but it is usable for people near the front of the stage By the time you get down to a 10MP APS-C sensor, it is barely usable for people at the front of the stage, and is useless for people near the back. Scale that down to 8 MP and it won't be. Add in the extra noise from a tiny sensor, and it wouldn't even be close to usable.

      And there's also the shutter speed problem. By my math, if I'd used an iPhone to shoot photos of a stage last week instead of my 6D, at the iPhone's maximum usable ISO, I'd have been limited to a 1/50th of a second shutter speed, which without optical IS is way too slow for my taste.

      Once you start adding teleconverters, yes, a phone can be a serviceable tool, albeit with a long list of caveats—the inability to quickly change the zoom length (AFAIK, they're all prime teleconverters, not true zooms), manual focus, fragility, focal plane inconsistency because of mount flex, and so on—none of which are show-stoppers, but all of which lead to significantly diminished "keeper rates". It's the difference between 20% of your shots being keepers and 95% of them being keepers. Mind you, I enjoy playing with manual focus primes every so often, but I'd never use one as my main lens. It's just too much work for the reward you get.

      ... and frankly lots of people are willing to use digital zoom also.

      Don't get me started on digital zooms. You might as well just crop the photo afterwards; you'll get the same result, but you might actually get other interesting stuff in the photo if you don't use one. :-)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    2. Re:Lots of people are replacing SLR cameras by dgatwood · · Score: 1

      Oh, yeah. I forgot to mention that those pixel counts were for adult-size heads. Scale accordingly for younger kids. :-)

      --

      Check out my sci-fi/humor trilogy at PatriotsBooks.

    3. Re:Lots of people are replacing SLR cameras by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      That's all true but for most people 28-50 pixels face is close enough, especially considering the burden carrying a real DSLR and lenses - even smaller mirrorless cameras mean a case and some weight. Some people will do it (I've done it) but fewer and fewer... the iPhone 6 plus IS also works pretty well for helping with lower light.

      The iPhone burst capture also really helps with low light, I've used the same technique on "real" cameras where in a burst one will be sharp as it was taken at just the moment your hands stopped shaking briefly.

      It also doesn't really matter if just 20% are keepers, because the images are easier to deal with on a smartphone (for most people). You don't have to go through the effort of getting them off the camera and deciding what you like, you can either deal with them in the moment or in brief moments while waiting for something.

      What you say is true about digital zooms, you might was well crop - only now you are framing for the crop live on screen essentially, meaning no work later.

      In thinking about photography for the masses, what most people want is zero work later. People who are not photographers want no post-process at all, so the closer anything gets to that the more people will use it.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  72. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You seem to think reflex has something to do with quick movement -- it does not (in the context of cameras). It does indeed signify the presence of a mirror. In a TLR a mirror is also used, it just doesn't have to move. A TLR is held at waist level, looking down. And yes, the earliest SLRs had a shutter behind the movable mirror, just like modern ones.

  73. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was of course addressed to AK Marc... somehow ended up in the wrong place.

  74. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    I seem to think it because it is reality. There were TLRs without a mirror. It was *never* a requirement for TLR, just like it isn't for SLR.

    100+ years ago when TLRs were around, there were still shutterless cameras. The TLR meant it was shuttered, and in no way required a mirror.

  75. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by itzly · · Score: 1

    Why would you want to display your photo on a slice of dead tree ?

  76. Another proprietary RAW format by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All else being equal, probably the only reason why I would drop my Sony body and lenses is to move away from a proprietary RAW format i.e. capture in DNG. But creating another proprietary RAW format doesn't look like out of the box thinking at all.

  77. Re: Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sweet or Russet? I seem to get better clarity with the russet but the sweet provides a softer more natural look.

  78. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We wouldn't. That's why we use paper.

  79. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by sexconker · · Score: 1

    So it actually gets seen.

  80. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    The shutter was a mirror. At the time did they have a shutter behind the mirror, or use the mirror as the shutter?

    Wikipedia's article on the history of SLR camera

    states:

    Early 35 mm SLR cameras had similar functionality to larger models, with a waist-level ground-glass viewfinder and a mirror which remained in the taking position—blacking out the viewfinder—after an exposure, returning when the film was wound on. Innovations which transformed the SLR were the pentaprism eye-level viewfinder and the instant-return mirror—the mirror flipped briefly up during exposure, immediately returning to the viewfinding position.

    Now, when the viewfinder blacks out, that means that the mirror has been raised to take a picture. If the mirror did not return instantly, or even worse, did not return until the film was rewound, this would mean that the shutter would be the only thing keeping the film from being overexposed. To solve this problem You could add a film door, and use a leaf shutter, but this complicates matters.

    Mirrors are heavy. Shutters are light enough to be moved in small fractions of a second.

    In a twin lens reflex camera, the mirror reflects the light entering the viewfinder lens, to the viewfinder screen at the top of the camera. The mirror doesn't need to move. because there's another lens below for the film.

  81. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since the whole world believes differently, care to cite some sources? [Read _any_ book on the history of photography to find our understanding of this matter.]
    The term TLR was coined to describe cameras that differed in these two points from earlier models -- i.e. they now had two lenses and a mirror. Earlier cameras (box, viewfinder, rangefinder, ...) also had shutters, but didn't need a mirror. What is in your interpretation the difference between these types of cameras that made it useful/important to put the "reflex" in the name? The change for SLRs was the _single_ lens, the "reflex" part just stayed the same. Using either term for a camera without a mirror is sloppy usage (nothing uncommon). I can only assume your interpretation came about because someone didn't understand that reflex corresponds to reflection and tried to think of their own explanation.

  82. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by dvdungeon · · Score: 1

    No, reflex does not have ANYTHING to do with the shutter. SLRs have always had a mirror on front of the shutter, the only real different is more modern systems automatic drop the mirror after the shot, whilst early systems had to do this manually. Some systems still allow you to manually lock the mirror out of the way, to reduce vibration when taking the shot. In TLR, reflex refers to the mirror used for viewing, again, nothing to do with the shutter. TLRs don't even use the same shutter system (leaf type) versus focal plane shutters used by SLRs.

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  83. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

    So "reflex" means "mirror"? Every dictionary I consulted, even some printed long ago, all refer to a reflex being a response to a stimulus. Such as a mirror moving by a shutter press or lever pull. It's not the mirror that's the reflex, it's the movement of it (or the shutter, or whatever else is moving in response to the stimulus). When the conclusion you give is 100% contradicted by the words you use, it's impossible to believe.

    Unless you can find a definition (in a reputable dictionary) that equates "reflex" to "mirror" then I'll go right on believing that "reflex" means "response to a stimulus", and that negates your entire argument.

  84. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Alright, let me quote the Oxford Dictionary of English:
    reflex camera: n. a camera with a ground-glass focusing screen on which the image is formed by a combination of lens and mirror, enabling the scene to be correctly composed and focused.
    reflexion: n. archaic spelling of reflection
    reflex: n. 3 (archaic) a reflected source of light.

  85. Re: Gadget guys vs photographers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Same here. I'm an 'amateur enthusiast' with high end photo gear and have used it to take photos in schools when asked, but don't just show up uninvited for fear of being 'labeled'. We have a great local gymnastics squad that would be fun to shoot while competing but I haven't done so because I've never been asked and don't think it's worth the risk to have people start to wonder why I'm there. I typically just stick with landscape photography because I don't have to deal with copyrights, model releases, and people in general. I don't doubt that within a few years there will only be female photographers, and 'pervs with cameras'.

  86. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    It takes a mirror to be a reflex camera, and it is only related to the shutter in that the mirror has to not block the light to the sensor/film when a picture is taken. Twin Lens Reflex (TLR) cameras use a fixed mirror, unrelated to the shutter. Beam splitter Single Lens Reflex (SLR) cameras like the Canon Pellix and Canon EOS RT use a fixed mirror unrelated to the shutter. Conventional SLRs use a flip-up mirror that moves before the shutter opens and flops down after the shutter closes.

    Reflex refers to the optical path to the viewfinder, involving a reflection.

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  87. Re: Technically DSLR doesn't specify a mirror or n by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

    Some camera manufacturers used leaf shutters in or behind the lens, in front of the mirror, on some models. They included Topcon, Kowa, Kodak, Hasselblad, Bronica and Rollei.

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  88. Re:Gadget guys vs photographers by fuzzy2k · · Score: 1

    So if the lens is great, you don't care if you use it with an old ~1 megapixel camera with a noisy sensor that requires long exposure times in reasonable light settings?

    If you want to be able to have sharp focus, maybe you do.

    Countering the idea that megapixels don't matter isn't the same as saying they are the only thing that matters.

    If you can't make an image with sharp edges, who cares what the pixel count is?

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