Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2005/01/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I may be utterly wrong, but here is a couple of personal reflections on which I would like to get your feedback. First, assuming that digital continues its growth on the high-end photo market, what is the future of digital SLR bodies? Using a high resolution LCD it is possible to make a "virtual" SLR where the mirror and screen are suppressed and replaced with this LCD. Digitally zooming (on demand) the centre of this LCD will provide an adequate substitute to the classical SLR (manual) focusing device (microprisms etc.). I am confident that engineers will soon be able to design a TTL autofocus system not needing a focusing screen. Second, the only difference between a digital RF and a digital SLR will then be the presence or not, of an optical finder with a mechanical rangefinder. There will be 3 types of bodies: -pure RF -pure LCD ("virtual SLR") -combined RF + (detachable?) LCD Third, once the oblique rays issue is solved, all bodies will have access to non-retrofocus wide-angle lenses, which was formerly the privilege of rangefinder cameras, thanks to the suppression of the mirror. This is good news for M-mount weitwinkel owners. Four, all future cameras will look much more like present RFs than like present SLRs. It is not feasible to add an optical rangefinder to a NikonF6 or a Leica R9, but it will be easy to add a LCD to a digital M and then to suppress the M's optical finder for budget (well, Leica budget) bodies. Five, concerning anti-shake bodies (as opposed to antishake lenses), which are the existing camera systems where at all times the body knows the focal length AND the focusing distance? The Leica M system. A very tiny mod. of the lenses would allow the M bodies to know the focal length without ambiguity (e.g. 28 or 90?). If some hard work on an existing SLR allowed to transmit focusing information to the body, then we would be halfway to turning a F6 into a RF! In other terms, the future is in RF and not in SLR bodies. Does this explain the recent move of Nikon towards RFs? Last reflection, the idea of an antishake body is excellent, as unlike an antishake lens, it should require no inertia sensor or mobile mechanical component: motion can be detected and processed on the image sensor itself (probably not on an old-fashined CCD but it can be done on a CMOS sensor which is fast enough and can integrate some computing power _behind each_ pixel sensor, that can be used to integrate light not always from the same pixel, but from the adequate neighbouring pixels according to the direction and amplitude of motion detected). Any comments? Jean "I dreamt a lightweight digital RF that can use all my M glass and becomes instantly a digital AF SLR on telephoto and macro use, Leica can make it" -- ------------------------------------------------------------ Dr Jean Louchet COMPLEX Project INRIA Rocquencourt BP105 78153 Le Chesnay cedex, France Jean.Louchet<at>inria.fr http://fractales.inria.fr/~louchet mobile: +33 6 7347 7707 ------------------------------------------------------------