Until recently the big race in digital camera development was megapixels. Thankfully manufacturers and users seem to be realising that we now have enough pixels for most applications and more often means less quality due to increased noise, especially with small sensor cameras.
The new race appears to be high ISO performance with minimum noise. Now I’m not saying that’s a bad thing but I just wonder whether we are becoming a bit too obsessed with it. The manufacturers need something to ‘improve’ so that we will keep buying new gear. Are we being brainwashed and when is high ISO high enough ? I have read in posts on this forum that the choice between camera A and camera B was made based on (slightly) better high ISO quality. I just wonder how many of us really need or will regularly use very high ISO and how many just think we need it because we have, in effect, been told we do.
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I have no particularly strong feelings on the above (and no real need for very high ISO) but I was thinking about it and I though it might be an interesting topic for discussion.
I was not aware of the "new race", but if this is indeed the case - and I have no reason to question the opinions here expressed that it is - then I personally welcome it and I think we all should welcome it, as it serves in this specific case the interests of us all.
True, it is not nice for our egos when new tech advances fall upon our heads and we cannot cope with the bills
to stay cool .
But what ? are we to opose NASA scientific investment out of our individual unability to put our own personal legs on the moon ? What kind of logic it is ?
Had you told me that NASA money will be better invested in US health equality - that's a totally different story and I will agree and may even donor to NASA (Paypal required).
Now the argument runs that high ISO development is not such a relevant priority for some of us. So what ? Can't you see the inter-relationship between the scientific advance in one area and its effect on the others ?
The REVOLUTIONARY stepping from film to digital was full of holes and tricky comercial traps, being the supression of the viewfinder one of the most ugly aspects, presented to the (mentally) poor consumers as an
advance, via implication.
If now the manufacturers, out of boredom or edges or curiousity, do expand the capacities of the digital camera in every possible aspect, we would do better expanding our own tolerance for innovation.
Not every new thing we must purchase. We should live longer if we adapt to the idea that the race for being cool is lost beforehand. And it doesn't make us "loosers".
Cheers,
Ruben