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It is the nature of the magic. A broken soul has cracks into which something else can be fit. Surgebindings, the powers of creation themselves. They can brace a broken soul; but they can also widen its fissures.
Quite revealing and further evidence that the decline of DSLRs isn't simply that cellphones are more convenient - they are actually competitive, not better certainly, but for many purposes, esp. web posting, fully competitive with DSLRs in many contexts - perhaps not for creating the classic creamy bokeh background isolating the subject, but for lots of other social shooting, they are quite good at capturing pretty high quality images. I am amazed by what a Galaxy S6 can do . . .
What you say is true, but the full frame SLR has totally eliminated the market for medium format film cameras. I have a lot of money tied up in my Mamiya Pro outfit, and it now has no earthly use. I bought it before digital SLR's were available.
what mobile phones are is a easy to use good enough camera for general shooting. i'd argue that most ppl who buy cameras dont actually need them or even make full use of them. it is these groups that smartphones are best suited for. for those who actually need the camera, like a wedding photog, that is the absolute best tool no matter if the smartphone outperforms it in absolute IQ. it cannot & will never replace dslr cameras.
I think yours is the key question. I'd love to hear from an imaging engineer who knows the challenges. I don't see diffraction as an insurmountable limit. For example, from my primitive understanding, it's the challenge that radio telescopes have, where the detectors can be small compared to the 30m wavelength. It's solved with "interferometric arrays", like LOFAR in Europe where software creates images from interference patterns. I've got no idea if it can work in a phone with visible wavelengths - just that the problem is solvable in theory with enough processing power... no idea if it could be engineered! But with so much money to the team that cracks the decent zoomable phone camera, I'm optimistic that it'll be cracked.
I appreciate any replies! Yup, many of these are limitations of the phones at the moment. If you're a sports/portrait/wildlife multi-flash location photographer, I find that current phones are an exercise in frustration to shoot with.I think of a phone as a different type of brush to paint with, good for different TYPES of pictures. If you enjoy working to their current strengths (e.g. street shooting, landscapes, social interations), I find them now very effective tools - much like prime lens compacts.To be pedantic, the Nokia offers full instant control over shutter, ISO and focus point, and has a minuscule but proper flash. And depth of field control is awkwardly and kludgily simulated by Nokia's focus-stacking app. But with faster processing, will this be how we all do apertures in a few years?
Extremely biased review. First of all, those images don't show the quality of the color reproduction, and dynamic range. This review is based only on the image details, and a bit of noise. Since when a good camera is only those two last points ? It is a pure joke, also, that the tester upscaled a low ~5 mpx picture to 20 mpx. While this tiny sensor Nokia is from 41 mpx to 20 mpx. It is logical that it will win ! You want to stretch an image to make it ugly and zoom all the defects (Canon 10D) and reduce an image to hide all its defects (Nokia)... It is 10x more intelligent to upscale ALL pictures to 50 mpx... Or lower all to 2 mpx ! I have an APSC camera of 2011 and 2007, and a Iphone 5s. And my Iphone will NEVER match my 2 DSLRs ! Maybe for a 2003 camera, but if it is fullframe, for the color and noise, I doubt ! Please make a new review, not biased, and showing all the global image quality as you know how to do it very well DPReview !
Hi Juandante, thanks for sharing your view. I thought exactly the same as you about upres/downres, and your approach is exactly what I tried first. Did you have a look at the page with all the technical notes that explained why we changed away from that method? We've put the full-res original pictures up, and I'd love someone to check them through and add in their thoughts about dynamic range and colour depth. It looks like we've reached the same conclusion that the iPhone 5S doesn't match a 2007 DSLR. Where would you place the images from the iPhone and Nokia among these DSLRs?
Of course nobody is going to want to lug around a full-on professional D4 to just "capture the moment" to post on instagram. This doesn't mean DSLRs are flawed or obsolete. Some people need their extra capability. There are a thousand cameras out there, from phone cameras, to professional DSLRs, so there is a camera for everybody. Each person just needs to choose the right camera for their own needs.
I think most readers understand the aim of the article, which I thoroughly enjoyed. There is also a take-away for buyers of MFT or APS-C systems. How long before they catch up with full-frame....or full frame catches up with the high end of medium format...and so on. Morals of the story? Buy good lenses - the sensors will just keep getting better and better. And, a great smart phone in your pocket is no good if you don't use it to take great pictures. Concentrate on the the photography, not the camera, remember it's an art form.
Chris and Jordan are enjoying some well deserved time off this week, so we're taking a trip in the wayback machine to revisit the launch of Canon's original full-frame mirrorless camera, the EOS R. Give it a watch to see how far Canon's mirrorless line has come.
The a7R V is the fifth iteration of Sony's high-end, high-res full-frame mirrorless camera. The new 60MP Mark IV, gains advanced AF, focus stacking and a new rear screen arrangement. We think it excels at stills. 2b1af7f3a8