Cory Papenfuss wrote:

>Given the eye's logarithmic sensitivity to intensity, it actually 
>make a lot of sense.  At least as much as gamma-correct fixed-point.  IIRC 
>some of the linux utilities used in the movie industry for CG stuff 
>(cinepaint, vips/nip) have support for some of these mini-floating-point 
>formats.  I think the've got 16-bit floats, 24-bit floats, etc.
>
>       I really doubt that the dynamic range is the problem of digital 
>encoding.  It really seems to be sensor limitations, judging by the 
>"shadow noise" of highly-stretched images.  You can encode all the way 
>down, but digitizing noise is still noise.
>
>       Now... if the ANALOG SNR could be improved (by say, a 
>50ISO-designed APS-sized sensor), then there might be some benefit.  As it 
>is, 12 linear bits seems to fit the effective dynamic range at ISO200 
>pretty well (yielding approx 8-bits of gamma-corrected image).

Great summation of the situation. Thanks!

In short, it means that if they're going to deliver more than the
current 12-bit (per color) data, there must have been a significant
advance in the design of the sensor - presumably made by Samsung.

I still doubt this will appear in the K10D but I'd be happy to be
wrong on this one!
 
-- 
Mark Roberts Photography & Multimedia
www.robertstech.com
412-687-2835

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