Tijmendal
Young photog
Absolutely. Though for me it's lenses more than camera's. A camera that handles well, is versatile and can handle extreme situations is important, I don't care too much about the IQ.
I may disagree, Dave.
Like it or not, image quality is *one* of the measures by which we evaluate or express preference for an image (photo in this case) over the other.
So it is valid to discuss it (not to argue about it).
I'm simply stating that I think I've reached my "ceiling" on digital image quality. I personally don't need more. That doesn't mean I don't like new camera releases, it's just "image quality" would no longer be one of my criteria.
I agree with a lot of comments in this thread so far.
I may disagree, Dave.
Like it or not, image quality is *one* of the measures by which we evaluate or express preference for an image (photo in this case) over the other.
So it is valid to discuss it (not to argue about it).
I'm simply stating that I think I've reached my "ceiling" on digital image quality. I personally don't need more. That doesn't mean I don't like new camera releases, it's just "image quality" would no longer be one of my criteria. ...
I've pretty much resigned myself to the fact that digital will never equal film in certain qualities, and that digital cameras themselves will never be have the qualities film cameras have.
Digital has long been "good enough" but it is still different enough (and lacking in some respects) that I prefer film.

Positively the M9 is good enough for me, no interest to upgrade to a M.
The issue with the term "image quality" is that there is no simple definition. More resolution? More dynamic range? Nicer contrast? Better bokeh? What does "better image quality" actually mean? It means different things to different people, and a good bit of it is lens rendering and then image processing, not sensor related at all. That's why "image quality" often a source of endless and unresolvable debate.
When I say "image quality is good enough" with a digital camera I mean a couple of specific things:
- There's enough dynamic range and resolution to capture individual rendering qualities of the lenses.
- The raw files out of the camera are robust enough to support the level of image processing I want to apply to achieve my photographic ideas.
- I can successfully make prints indistinguishable from the same sizings that I used to made with film cameras, with some leeway (both plus and minus) due to differing format sizes and sensor resolution.
It's quite valid to discuss image quality, but it is necessary to say what it is specifically and clearly enough if you want to avoid endless debate.
G
Sure, we can dissect the term ad-infinitum.
But we all can readily summarize what the term commonly means.
...
Regards the bolded text: Please do. I have no idea what is meant by "image quality" by anyone other than myself.
I mean this without disparagement or the desire to debate. I sincerely have no idea what you mean by "image quality" or what anyone else means by it, other than some fuzzy notion that "Da pitcha's look good to me." 🙂
G
Is there such a thing as "Good enough" for you?
With few exceptions, all of my cameras from the 70s to today have "good enough" performance and in digital, I don't buy top of the line. If somebody wants to argue that, then they are probably more gear oriented than photography oriented. Not that there is anything wrong with that.