Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2010/04/01
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> Mark.. best for what kind of photography or image creation? Is "best" a > relative term? > > Usually the word "best" is a comparison of 2 or more. > > Considering you have a choice of one technology only in your camera > selection, I guess the word "BEST" could be considered applicable. > > Let's try to get this grounded...... All the manufacturers are implementing > CMOS, so for the foreseeable ( by us consumers) future, it is what we must > learn to live with. It is the BEST we have. > > Note: I have no idea of what camera uses what kind of sensor technology, > nor > do I care. I have a Nikon D1x and a Leica M8. I am satisfied because they > do what I want them to do. > > Frank Filippone > red735i at earthlink.net > > Yes but that's what best means. Best for the job at hand. > A sensor could be superior to CMOS but cost a million dollars it takes it > out of the conversation I think. Nobodies going to be using it except NASA > and the NSA. > But the best sensor for high end consumer and pro digital cameras would > seem > to be CMOS at this point. As that's what they all are. > > > I agree with you. And yes best is a relative term which the main part of my point. The cameras have all gone comos. What would the be like if they'd stayed CCD. Do you know? I sure don't. I heard last week sombody invented a whole new kind of sensor. It was on my news page thing. Perhaps in 5 years all the cameras will be that. And I'll still not be trying to second guess the people who design and implement those systems. [Rabs] Mark William Rabiner