2F/2F
Member
Here's a thought experiment: Use a 10 second exposure and move the camera up and down? Will the dot be blurred? Of course; it will be a line. Now explain why the physics of motion are different for 10 seconds vs. 1/10th of a second.
Yes, the dot moves with the camera. That's the point. However the background doesn't move and the path the dot traces on the background will be recorded.
The point of the test should be to see how a moving camera records a static object in a real world situation...not to see how a moving camera records the movement of an object that is moving just as much as the camera. Photographing the laser attached to the camera will tell you how much the camera moves, but photographing a still object will tell you how a still object will actually be rendered. The first is simply informative. The second gives you actual practical knowledge. For instance, not just how much does the camera move, but how much movement is acceptable in a picture that is shot in a real-world situation.
Really. This is test is terribly over engineered. Why can't you just shoot the front page of the Times tacked to a bulletin board? Shooting a laser is just a techy way to make some piece of modern technology seem more useful than it really is.
...besides, we all know that the ONLY real use for a laser pointer is for playing with cats.