In my mind it's difficult to understand the difference between 
sharpness/unsharpness/detail and noise.  It seems to me that an image 
considered to be sharp, yet with a lot of noise, is in reality not sharp 
and/or contains less detail because the noise is itself replacing detail 
that would otherwise be there.

Noisy picture = Yucky picture.


Tom C.


----Original Message Follows----
From: Joseph Tainter <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: Pentax-Discuss Mail List <[email protected]>
To: [email protected]
Subject: K10D aimed as D200 killer
Date: Mon, 30 Oct 2006 12:09:23 -0800

My comment at end. (Caution: Some of you wll hate it. You may not want
to read it.)

-----

Remember the reviews of the *istD? It got beaten up because Pentax
decided to make soft pictures strait out of the box. I was not part of
the list then, but I imagine many talking about this being better
because it left the decision to the photographer.

As I understand it, it's the same with noise vs. details.


Tim
Mostly harmless (just plain Norwegian)


-----Original Message-----

In addition, requiring the the user to do even more in post-processing
to try to correct for what could be viewed as a camera short-coming,
strikes me as a cop out.  I already don't use the *ist D for anything
serious over ISO 800.  I don't want additional post-processing work,
that may or may not correct the situation on an image-by-image basis.

Tom C.

-----
At dpreview I just found a translation of a interview with Hisashi
Tatamiya, who has been leading the K10D project.

http://forums.dpreview.com/forums/read.asp?forum=1036&message=20671456

-----

I believe Pentax made the right decision in regard to high ISO noise.
Image sharpness is retained, if you can figure out a way to reduce noise
in PP without softening the image. But Nikon may have been smarter
marketing-wise.

Pentax would have been criticized whichever way they went. Popular
Photography's review of the D80 praised it for low noise at high ISO,
completely forgetting to mention that the D80 achieves this at the cost
of soft images. When Pop reviews the K10D, they will complain that it
compares poorly to the D80 in high ISO noise. And readers who don't know
any better will believe that that is the final word.

Reading between the lines of the summary of the interview, Mr. Tatamiya
is (it seems to me) saying two things: (1) there will be noise at high
ISO and you may not like it, and (2) its your problem. None of this is a
surprise. The sensor is known to be noisy at high ISO, and I suspected
that Pentax would choose a middle course between Nikon and Sony. I just
hope that images will be useable at ISO 800. If they are, I'll be
satisfied. But I am not expecting this.

Herb Chong contacted me off-list, and suggested something I had not
heard before. According to Herb, the rule of thumb for good image
quality is two steps above the base ISO. This matches my experience with
the D, which is fine at 800, but (to my eye) not at 1600. If this rule
of thumb holds for the 10 mp sensor, then ISO 400 will be the point
above which we can expect image quality to decline noticeably due to noise.

(Actually, the paragraph above assumes that all else is equal--like
pixel density. Since the K10D has a higher pixel density, one may expect
the loss of an additional step due to inherently higher noise. Combining
(1) lower base ISO, and (2) smaller pixel size, the K10D could
conceiveably yield noticeable degradation in image quality above ISO
200. But Nikon seems to get good image quality without softening at ISO
400, so I believe we will too.)

Joe

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