![]() ![]() More resolution with a signal/noise ratio that is equal The view at 100% (to my eyes) is not that flattering where it comes to eyebrows and eyelashes.įor all of the chipper talk we hear about how smaller sized pixels are capable of providing Under the limit of color-channel linearity. However, when I crop a TIF made from it to a 1600x1200 section that includes the model's eyes, nose and forehead, the Red color-channel The Red color-channel (only) is clipped by a fairly significant amount in the original sample image. Regarding Panasonic Image Sample Number One: the presumably more expensive to buy, but less expensive to manufacture, "higher-end" MOS-sensor-ed model was even painfully obvious. And the superior (as in most if not all cases) IQ of the CCD-sensor-ed camera's example vs. Massive megapixel and "feature"(sic!) -dumping, battery-draining crap into camera bodies is obviously no substitute for image quality. Quote, "CCDs still enjoy significant noise advantages over CMOS imagers because of quieter sensor substrates (less on-chip circuitry), inherent tolerance to bus capacitance variations and common output amplifiers with transistor geometries that can be easily adapted for minimal noise." (Īgree 100%. Those issues have nothing to do with the number of pixels. ![]() On the IQ front for real world shooting conditions by the average Joe. but the results from these new models is nearly equivalent when exposed properly. I going to wait a bit on upgrading my ZS7/TZ10 yet. So you get a bigger image without loss in quality? Sweet! Sounds like upsizing a ZS7's output with no quality degradation. Here is the extended exif of the ZS8/TZ18 image above:įor those who are interested in downloading the original files, click on the link to Panasonic's site below: SceneType - A directly photographed image SensingMethod - One-chip color area sensor Here is the extended exif of the ZS10/TZ20 image above:įlash - Flash not fired, compulsory flash mode Viewing hint: Click on this image once to expand it. Below is the first official image sample from the ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |