Photo Engineer
Subscriber
A few weeks ago, Timester posted a thread purporting to support analog over digital, and included some very wrong or shaky science.
Since then, I have been trying to read up on the digital advances to let you judge digital for yourself. This is NOT a digital post, nor a diatrabe against/for digital or analog for that matter (you all know where I stand).
Here are some digital facts:
1. New sensors are being designed in which the R/G/B sensor array is not side-by-side, but rather stacked in a manner similar to the layered structure of analog film. This may reduce "grain" and improve sharpness of digital imaging. It will eliminate aliasing. (many publications have been written about this and a few new products available now use this technology)
2. The invention of the superlens, which uses metamaterials (Pendry and Smith, Physics Today, Vol 57, #6, pp 37-48, June 2004.) allows materials to have a negative index of refraction. This means that a sensor array element can be constructed with a size smaller than the wavelength of light used to create it. This is not theory, it has been reduced to practice and is coming.
The point is not to enhance the image (pun alert) of digital, or run down analog, as stated above. This is a factual statement of two major fields of digital R&D which will change the playing field wrt digital vs analog, and it is coming in our near future. The major companies are all alert to this and it is governing their actions in both areas of work.
As I said in an earlier post, it is very hard and expensive to perform analog photographic research as it is a mature science, but with digital, it is on the upslope of a typical exponential curve observed in a 'young' science. You get more 'bang' for the bucks invested in digital.
The most recent analog research example is the 25,000 speed reversal thermally developed film invented by Gilman et. al. Otherwise, there is little real research in this field, it is mainly small improvements in existing technology.
So, here are some facts for you to mull over. I don't want to foster controversy, just alert you to the state of current digital research and answer some absurd science posted previously regarding this subject.
Analog forever is my motto regardless.
PE
Since then, I have been trying to read up on the digital advances to let you judge digital for yourself. This is NOT a digital post, nor a diatrabe against/for digital or analog for that matter (you all know where I stand).
Here are some digital facts:
1. New sensors are being designed in which the R/G/B sensor array is not side-by-side, but rather stacked in a manner similar to the layered structure of analog film. This may reduce "grain" and improve sharpness of digital imaging. It will eliminate aliasing. (many publications have been written about this and a few new products available now use this technology)
2. The invention of the superlens, which uses metamaterials (Pendry and Smith, Physics Today, Vol 57, #6, pp 37-48, June 2004.) allows materials to have a negative index of refraction. This means that a sensor array element can be constructed with a size smaller than the wavelength of light used to create it. This is not theory, it has been reduced to practice and is coming.
The point is not to enhance the image (pun alert) of digital, or run down analog, as stated above. This is a factual statement of two major fields of digital R&D which will change the playing field wrt digital vs analog, and it is coming in our near future. The major companies are all alert to this and it is governing their actions in both areas of work.
As I said in an earlier post, it is very hard and expensive to perform analog photographic research as it is a mature science, but with digital, it is on the upslope of a typical exponential curve observed in a 'young' science. You get more 'bang' for the bucks invested in digital.
The most recent analog research example is the 25,000 speed reversal thermally developed film invented by Gilman et. al. Otherwise, there is little real research in this field, it is mainly small improvements in existing technology.
So, here are some facts for you to mull over. I don't want to foster controversy, just alert you to the state of current digital research and answer some absurd science posted previously regarding this subject.
Analog forever is my motto regardless.
PE