What Tom said. Plus...

Hot pixels become more visible as exposure times lengthen: I have a few on my DS that surface with exposure times approaching 2 seconds.

There are three solutions to hot pixels: Noise Reduction in the camera, hot pixel removal in the RAW converter, and cloning in post- conversion image processing. All three work very well ... cloning is a manual process and can be time consuming, however.

Vuescan's raw conversion does not do hot pixel removal, where Photoshop + Camera Raw does. You can see the differences in the no-NR/ NR comparison photo I posted a few weeks ago:
   http://homepage.mac.com/godders/straight-NR-comp.jpg

Left-most is NR off and processed with Vuescan: it's the only one the hot pixels are visible in.

Godfrey


On Sep 1, 2005, at 8:56 AM, Tom C wrote:

Hot pixels are photosites on the sensor that are, in layman's terms, more sensitive to the light striking them, than average pixels. Therefore they turn 'ON' sooner and tend to be more visible during long exposures. Cold or dead pixels are photosites that are always turned 'OFF'. There are also stuck pixels. These are photosites that are always 'ON'.

From my own experience, if you don't look for them you probably won't see them.


From: "Shel Belinkoff" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I recall seeing some discussions about these things, but never paid much attention to them. So now that I've joined the Pixel Parade, it might be helpful to know what they are and if I should be concerned about them. Are
there "cold pixels" as well?

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