What specific flaws do you wish to address?
Edit. If you are speaking of the current state of sensor design, then the efficiency level of capture can still be improved upon.
I have zero interest in that. Modern sensors already capture more than any currently available reproduction medium supports. The HDR nonsense is mankind's own admission that we're out of good ideas for what to do with this incredible dynamic range.
I would like to see they perfect the electronic shutter on new imaging sensor so there is no need for the shutter.
Perceived issues with digital photography are not with image capture, but viewing.
There are advocates of sensors other than the popular Bayer type. Fuji persevere with an "X-trans" array, and multiple CCD sensors are still popular for their rendering, at the expense of high ISO performance. Sigma Foveon also had a more film-like appearance, but died through commercial pressure elsewhere.To a large degree yes. But digital in all current forms fails to give you a true, you-are-there experience that slide film excels at, however good it appears to be otherwise.
This is the main issue I seek to improve upon.
I missed this earlier posting of yours. I don't know that I've seen such a quality in any photograph, whether shot on film or digitally. But technologies like virtual reality can deliver some remarkable experiences.For me, it's the same problems overall as found in digital audio, the lack of a true you-are-there realism.
Digital cameras have defaulted to all things to all people tech, with low light rendering beyond anything film offered.
Perhaps the technology already exists to offer subtle pictorial images if we were content with speeds of 50 to 400 ISO and large charge coupled devices?
I missed this earlier posting of yours. I don't know that I've seen such a quality in any photograph, whether shot on film or digitally.
You don't have to restrict yourself to viewing low resolution. An 8K display can fully display a 32MP image which is near the top MP of current cameras.Perceived issues with digital photography are not with image capture, but viewing. Printing has the advantage of blurring dots to create a seamless image in ink. Given a suitably attractive and archival print medium, and a printer with sufficient colours, digital photography is capable of creating tonally and chromatically rich prints. The problem is print has all but died outside commercial magazines and photo club competitions, leaving the majority of photographs to be viewed on the ephemeral and mostly low fidelity medium of the computer screen.
In some ways this is an old problem. The popularity of cheap printing was always infinitely greater than the making or buying of fine photographic prints. In many ways print quality is less expensive now and easier to achieve, with online print on demand services for photographs and books. This is not translated into the number of hard copies made, and good gallery prints still require expensive equipment and ink. People are happy to invest in expensive cameras and lenses capable of huge enlargement, without ever testing the potential of their equipment, except in fragmented electronic form.
You don't have to restrict yourself to viewing low resolution. An 8K display can fully display a 32MP image which is near the top MP of current cameras.
Here you go:One thing I have been thinking about is adding self calibration technology to monitors, by employing sensors that can detect both luminance and color temperature.
You don't have to restrict yourself to viewing low resolution. An 8K display can fully display a 32MP image which is near the top MP of current cameras.
But will you actually see it? When I was switching from 1080p to 4K I found that the combination of size of a panel and the viewing distance need to be just right to actually have a perceivable benefit. Even assuming a perfect vision, the range was incredibly narrow (need to look up my notes) as pixel density generally doesn't match viewing distance (most 4K TVs are just too small). I suspect that for 8K that range is minuscule and possibly non-existent, i.e. outside of wall-sized screens the benefit may be strictly imaginary.
My opinion is that in terms of dynamic range and resolution we're pretty much done. Any additional incremental improvements aren't not going to be tangible. One interesting area to explore is post-capture focusing, i.e. you focus when you view an image, not when you capture it. In the past we were limited by resolution to implement it, but looks like we're have an abundance of that now.
You just need to be closer! I know people accustom to looking at screen at further distance but with higher resolution you need to be closer.
You don't have to restrict yourself to viewing low resolution. An 8K display can fully display a 32MP image which is near the top MP of current cameras.
A new high (low?) in meaningless techno-blather....digital technology is based on an artificial construct, the result of which in it's current state results in a flawed facsimile...
A new high (low?) in meaningless techno-blather.![]()
I just tried the "Ignorant" feature and it's marvelous.
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