JohnL
Very confused
ferider said:Not sure what you mean by linear. Linear in terms of Gallois field function ?
Do you know if or not the M8 uses a non-linear code ? I doubt it.
In any case, the encoding does not matter. It's the information quantity that matters. Measured in bits. Go the other way and you will see. Take an 8 bit signal, and encode into, say 12 bits. You still have 8bit dynamic range.
Bit depth and dynamic range have no direct relationship. Dynamic range is the number of stops (or other measure of difference in light intensity) from black (zero) to the brightest value in each channel that just doesn't blow the highlights. This is a function of the sensor technology. Bit depth determines the number of steps into which that range is divided, i.e. the precision with which each different level is measured and recorded. According to Leica, they measure at 16 bits, but only record 8 (both per-channel, of course). They claim to have done some magic with the use of those 256 levels (per channel), which definitely suggests non-linearity, so as to enhance the shadows (or was it the highlights?). However, with only 256 levels per channel, I strongly suspect the raw (DNG) files will not be terribly robust under more than minimal manipulation. This is one of the two primary reasons why I decided not to buy an M8. The other was the crop sensor, and the consequent non-stellar high ISO performance.
Edit: fixed typo.
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