And is obviously wrong. E.g.:
This cannot apply to the matrix metering in esp. older cameras, since those had no physical way to store a database of 30k images, nor to pattern-match that data within milliseconds, not even if the data are abstracted into a handful of bytes of data per image (which would be inadequate). Inefficient and essentially impossible with the technology as it was when Nikon's matrix metering/scene recognition came into being.
I think you are too literally interpreting the use of a database of pictures, 'stored' within the camera. Digital storage was not employed, but the analysis of many images to determine an algorithm to embed. Nikon says the data was analyzed 'in an analog way'...
Nikon debuted Automatic Multi-Pattern metering in the Nikon FA in
1983, but it relied on algorithms and a 5-segment meter rather than a reference photo database.
I found Nikon's own description:
"It was a device to measure the information on the brightness of the subject in each area of 24-segmented image plane, by interpreting the graphic output produced on paper by this pen recorder. At present this is processed with a personal computer in the way that the output signal of the metering device is input as a database by means of an A/D (analog-to-digital) converter, but in those days, it was processed in entirely 'analog' manner....
"Further, they took pictures of variety of scenes as far as they can imagine, and repeated the brush up of the algorithm by analyzing the results of them. As a matter of course, staff members went to many spots of the world to collect the data of other than Japan that is located in the mild temperate zone.
Before the world first "Matrix metering" was completed and incorporated into Nikon FA which was released in September 1983, six years and the efforts of many people involved in the project were required."
In 2005, Ken Rockwell's write-up:
"The superior Matrix meter is the main reason to choose Nikon over other brands.
"Nikon's Matrix metering, introduced as "Automatic Multi-Pattern" (AMP) metering in the FA camera in 1983, was the world's first meter that actually measured exposure, instead of just light. It is one of the most important advances in photographic technology. This meter knows how to make white snow or sand look white, instead of a conventional light meter's making everything look medium 18% gray. It applies the zone system automatically to attempt to render a correct exposure under difficult and contrasty situations. When shooting in a hurry under rapidly changing conditions, which is the whole point of using a small format camera like a Nikon, there is no better way to meter your exposures....
"All the other major SLR makers since about 1990 have imitated this meter under many different names. Canon calls it "evaluative," and most camera makers brag about it by specifying how many sensors they use. Even Leica attempts to copy it. Today's Leica R8 has about the same technical sophistication as the 1983 Nikon FA."