No, no, no, Don. Sony do not do shift lenses. Its Nikon or Canon.
No, no, no, Don. Sony do not do shift lenses. Its Nikon or Canon.
@DonaldB has written:the mods are pulling all the tricks to make MF look better compared to FF.
There's already a meaning "of "MF" in common usage: Medium Format. Why do you add confusion by referring to what is called "m43" or "MFT" (which almost everyone understands) as "MF"? You're the "A ninety-three" guy too, aren't you? Saving one character is really efficient, isn't it?
so what is correct 93 or 9iii or even 9III maybe 9iiv 🤔 ive got it now sony a 9. 20+45-56x67/45 🫣
DPR is a commercial enterprise. They set the rules, and they chose to allow some bullies in amongst the moderating team. The DPR forums are sinking into a swamp of mediocrity, hardy a tragedy when some little asshole on a power trip decides that they do not want my participation.
Yep -- some prefer to be King Shit on Turd Island than a judge in a just court. As wrongdoings in the world go, it really is the smallest of First World Problems in the end. Nevertheless, just one more disappointment that hits close to home. Not to worry -- unrelated bigger disappointments with much more terrible consequences are sure to be made known in short order. 😁
@JohnSheehyRev has written: @DonaldB has written:the mods are pulling all the tricks to make MF look better compared to FF.
There's already a meaning "of "MF" in common usage: Medium Format. Why do you add confusion by referring to what is called "m43" or "MFT" (which almost everyone understands) as "MF"? You're the "A ninety-three" guy too, aren't you? Saving one character is really efficient, isn't it?
so what is correct 93 or 9iii or even 9III maybe 9iiv 🤔 ive got it now sony a 9. 20+45-56x67/45 🫣
intellegents is inventing contraptions/systems not substanciating inventions.
yesterday my daughter wanted me to print some "Plicker cards" as she is a science teacher. and while i was delivering them to her
my mind reversed engineered what they were used for and how they were designed. wouldnt matter how many computer science/engineering degrees a person has
this was invented by a practical person ,probaly a teacher in the industry with a need. what a great invention, i loved it. i worked as a systems designer for apple back in the 80s.
@NCV has written:DPR is a commercial enterprise. They set the rules, and they chose to allow some bullies in amongst the moderating team. The DPR forums are sinking into a swamp of mediocrity, hardy a tragedy when some little asshole on a power trip decides that they do not want my participation.
Yep -- some prefer to be King Shit on Turd Island than a judge in a just court. As wrongdoings in the world go, it really is the smallest of First World Problems in the end. Nevertheless, just one more disappointment that hits close to home. Not to worry -- unrelated bigger disappointments with much more terrible consequences are sure to be made known in short order. 😁
As we are blindly drifting towards a serious war here in Europe, the antics and ignorance of Mr Caldwell are the least of my worries (yes I read the BS in the DPR thread). I am more worried about one of our dear leaders asking my son to die for Kiev.
I agree it is annoying that a pleasant distraction to daily life has been spoiled.
@DonaldB has written: @GreatBustard has written: @PeteW has written:You are right, he won't care and will just shift his goalposts around to confuse the situation more than it already is.
An all too common tactic that gets boring/annoying really, really fast.
Quoted message:Thankfully this debate isn't happening in the open forum. After TC locked the thread, EZGritz wanted to keep going so he sent me a PM to tell me I was wrong, didn't understand etc. So this has all been playing out in PMs. If it had been in the open forum, I think I'd have been put into the sandbox with you by now!
In the past, I didn't engage people who I considered "willfully ignorant" via PM. I would always tell them to start a thread on the matter, preferably in the Photographic Science and Technology forum, but, with only a single exception, they refused. They don't want what they're saying to be in public, for obvious reasons.
@PeteW has written:If it was within my power, I would make you DPR m4/3 moderator for a week. That would be fun to watch.
Honestly, I'd be pretty chill, like this site. So long as the willfully ignorant were not abusive, I'd let them have their say, especially as I'm quite the fan of watching people punch themselves in the face, with their backers cheering them on, "You got'em, man! Keep blocking those fists with your face -- he's getting tired!" 😁
That said, I never had interest in being a moderator (pretend, for the briefest of moments, that an offer would ever be extended). It's a conflict of interest, as I'm a player. It would be like having someone from one of the teams playing ref a game. No matter how honest they are, there's an obvious conflict of interest.
I would like to say that DPR should have a rule that a moderator cannot moderate a thread they participate in, but the moderators would likely share a "code", like police, and act as a gang. The only way to make that work is if the identity of the moderators was made known only to the admins and forum software randomly assigned them threads to moderate and blocked them from posting in said threads. Of course, even that isn't perfect, but a lot better than how things work over there.
At the very least, mods need to be held accountable for their moderation, just as police need to be held accountable for their actions, but, as we all know, the admins don't care, and even if such a system were implemented, it would be, "We've investigated our own and found no wrong doing." Maybe the occasional sacrificial lamb to give the illusion of something being done to the masses, but that would be about it. Might seem strange to people who are not native to Earth, though. 😉
admins dont care as its a sales site( they promote what the admins are doing). the more the admins control the comparrisions the better the sales amounst brand Enthusiasm. if there was no brand loyalty and we were all honest with ourselves we would be all shooting Sony 😁🫣
No, no, no, Don. Sony do not do shift lenses. Its Nikon or Canon.
i was impressed with the Z8 image comparrision on the MF forum. shame the processing was dodgy'ed up to make it look inferior.
@DanHasLeftForum has written:As I said, you are asking people to just take your word for it. Some will and some won't.
I always thought that Don posted this sort of comparison as a kind of puzzle. 'Can you work out how I fixed this?'
😇ignor it unless you seek the true intention 🤔 nobody learns anything by given the answers along with the questions 😊
@sybersitizen has written: @DonaldB has written: @sybersitizen has written:What do you see in those results?
What do you conclude from them?
Do you believe they disprove things that others here believe about equivalence? If so, what things?
shooting close ups is a lot less noticeable from the first set of images i posted.
My own recent experiments shooting up close (like at 1:1 magnification or more) revealed something to me: There's no DOF difference at all when using the same f-number on different formats to produce an image with the same framing, the same noise, etc. That's a surprise at first because we habitually discuss equivalence in terms of focal length and f-number. But those terms get slippery at focus distances other than infinity, so to cover all the circumstances we should probably be using terms like magnification and 'apparent' f-number. Even the term '1:1 magnification' gets slippery when comparing formats. If the larger sensor format is shooting a tiny object at 1:1 magnification in-camera, the smaller sensor format will capture the same image at the same f-number and at less than 1:1 magnification in-camera.
i will test using 10:1 microscope objectives using very acurate system and tell you the results between apsc and FF.
I could do that as well with my 10x microscope objective (and I could compare full frame and APS-C and 1") but it's not the same thing. That would no longer be testing with 'equivalent' focal lengths for each format, which was the way I did it, so it would illustrate a different principle.
In the past, I didn't engage people who I considered "willfully ignorant" via PM. I would always tell them to start a thread on the matter, preferably in the Photographic Science and Technology forum, but, with only a single exception, they refused. They don't want what they're saying to be in public, for obvious reasons.
If Mr Gritz does respond to my last message, I think this will be my response. That should close it all off!
Honestly, I'd be pretty chill, like this site. So long as the willfully ignorant were not abusive, I'd let them have their say, especially as I'm quite the fan of watching people punch themselves in the face, with their backers cheering them on, "You got'em, man! Keep blocking those fists with your face -- he's getting tired!" 😁
LOL, it is admittedly quite funny to watch.
I would like to say that DPR should have a rule that a moderator cannot moderate a thread they participate in, but the moderators would likely share a "code", like police, and act as a gang. The only way to make that work is if the identity of the moderators was made known only to the admins and forum software randomly assigned them threads to moderate and blocked them from posting in said threads. Of course, even that isn't perfect, but a lot better than how things work over there.
At the very least, mods need to be held accountable for their moderation, just as police need to be held accountable for their actions, but, as we all know, the admins don't care, and even if such a system were implemented, it would be, "We've investigated our own and found no wrong doing." Maybe the occasional sacrificial lamb to give the illusion of something being done to the masses, but that would be about it. Might seem strange to people who are not native to Earth, though. 😉
Yes, DPR forum moderation is quite haphazard.
The m4/3 forum seems to deliver a weekly "here's why m4/3 rules the world" post that is full of faulty logic and results in 8 pages of stupidity. TC seems to be getting increasingly grouchy but not with the actual protagonists.
@DanHasLeftForum has written: @bobn2 has written: @DanHasLeftForum has written:As I said, you are asking people to just take your word for it. Some will and some won't.
I always thought that Don posted this sort of comparison as a kind of puzzle. 'Can you work out how I fixed this?'
If he's still posting puzzles, has anything really been fixed?
im sorry that a photograph is a puzzle you havnt figured out yet. your not alone. photographers are still second guessing themselves with maths 🫣😎
I didn't say your photos were puzzling.
I said they might or might not be dodgy as support for the agenda you push.
@PeteW has written: @bobn2 has written: @PeteW has written:Thankfully this debate isn't happening in the open forum. After TC locked the thread, EZGritz wanted to keep going so he sent me a PM to tell me I was wrong, didn't understand etc. So this has all been playing out in PMs. If it had been in the open forum, I think I'd have been put into the sandbox with you by now!
The problem that I have with this is that the discussion has been terminated on the open forum, leaving the disinformation there to misinform future deniers whilst you are stuck in a private conversation that will never go anywhere, because EZG will never change his mind. You'd think it would be chastening for him to have found out that his definition of 'aperture' is completely wrong, and he'd have gone back and reworked his argument from there - but of course no. You can continue the pm conversation for as long as you like, it will never succeed in persuading him that he's got it wrong.
Yes, you're right. He is not going to back down/ From the tone of the responses, he is quite sure that he is right! I've sent him one more message using GB's example scenario. No response yet but I think I'm done with it.
I have read your posts about your interactions on DPR. The debate should be out in the open, otherwise it is just two people talking past each other. But then that is a sure way to get banned or sandboxed where you were posting. I just cant be bothered to argue on DPR anymore, about anything.
I would prefer it to be out in the open too, but as you know the moderator will eject anyone who he perceives is not agreeing that m4/3 is equal or better than FF.
Now, I believe personally, that the theoretical basis of the "Equivalence" question is correct. But when we throw into the ring, different cameras with different sensor technology, some recent and some old, and we add into the equation different lenses with different resolving power and such, the water starts to become muddy and the precise differences between formats, become less accurate to a greater or lesser degree. It is up to us as individuals to decide the usefulness of this concept.
And if you also throw in the fact that a large number of people are viewing images on small screens, the differences are difficult to see.
This article by the rather arrogant Ctein has some good points in the comment section, from both sides of the argument.
There are other areas of ignorance in our little world of photography, that I find more annoying.
Thanks, I will have a read of this.
Joe, if I can just side-track the conversation with a question.
In the examples I have used in previous posts (in my debate with the DPR forum member) I use the basic formula to show the physical size of the aperture for a prime lens, e.g. 50mm focal length ÷ f/2.8 = 18mm aperture.
Now... say we have a zoom lens 24-105mm f/4. This means at 24mm the aperture would be 24 ÷ f/4 = 6mm and at 105mm it would be 105 ÷ f/4 = 26mm. Which means that the physical aperture gets wider the further you zoom. Is that right? And therefore total light is higher at longer focal lengths? And DOF more shallow?
When I think of constant aperture zoom lenses like the 24-105 f/4, the assumption I've always made is that the aperture doesn't change at any focal length, but this must only be true in terms of the f-ratio but not true in terms of the actual physical aperture.
Or have I got something wrong here? 😟
... say we have a zoom lens 24-105mm f/4. This means at 24mm the aperture would be 24 ÷ f/4 = 6mm and at 105mm it would be 105 ÷ f/4 = 26mm. Which means that the physical aperture gets wider the further you zoom. Is that right?
Even if the physical aperture doesn't change, something has to change in a constant aperture zoom lens. It might only be an 'apparent' change, but the resulting effects are the same..
And therefore total light is higher at longer focal lengths? And DOF more shallow?
In a constant aperture zoom scenario, total light is the same at all focal lengths (aside from things like corner falloff) ... but yes, DOF naturally gets more shallow as the focal length increases..
This article by the rather arrogant Ctein has some good points in the comment section, from both sides of the argument.
There are other areas of ignorance in our little world of photography, that I find more annoying.
Thanks, I will have a read of this.
I just read the ctein article and the comments. OMG. 😂
Why does it seem to be mostly Olympus m4/3 owners who deny equivalence? Is the Olympus marketing that powerful?
In a constant aperture zoom scenario, total light is the same at all focal lengths (aside from things like corner falloff) ... but yes, DOF naturally gets more shallow as the focal length increases..
OK, so I am not understanding the part about total light being the same at all focal lengths.
@sybersitizen has written:In a constant aperture zoom scenario, total light is the same at all focal lengths (aside from things like corner falloff) ... but yes, DOF naturally gets more shallow as the focal length increases..
OK, so I am not understanding the part about total light being the same at all focal lengths.
Why would it change? The f-number (f/4 in this case) is still the same, and the sensor area is still the same, so total light is still the same, just as if you mounted any prime and shot photos at f/4.
Joe, if I can just side-track the conversation with a question.
In the examples I have used in previous posts (in my debate with the DPR forum member) I use the basic formula to show the physical size of the aperture for a prime lens, e.g. 50mm focal length ÷ f/2.8 = 18mm aperture.
Now... say we have a zoom lens 24-105mm f/4. This means at 24mm the aperture would be 24 ÷ f/4 = 6mm and at 105mm it would be 105 ÷ f/4 = 26mm. Which means that the physical aperture gets wider the further you zoom. Is that right? And therefore total light is higher at longer focal lengths? And DOF more shallow?
When I think of constant aperture zoom lenses like the 24-105 f/4, the assumption I've always made is that the aperture doesn't change at any focal length, but this must only be true in terms of the f-ratio but not true in terms of the actual physical aperture.
Or have I got something wrong here? 😟
It is as finnan posted:
There are three different terms using "aperture":
- The physical aperture (iris) is the smallest opening within a lens.
- The effective aperture (entrance pupil) is the image of the physical aperture when looking through the front element of the lens.
- The relative aperture (f-ratio) is the [reciprocal of the] quotient of the focal length and the effective aperture.
...
Interestingly, a "constant aperture" zoom is a zoom lens where physical aperture (iris) remains constant, but the effective aperture (entrance pupil) scales with the focal length, thus keeping the relative aperture (f-ratio) constant as well.
In short, the effective aperture (entrance pupil) is what's relevant with regards to both DOF and the total amount of light projected on the sensor whereas the relative aperture (f-number) is what's relevant with regards to exposure (the density of light projected on the sensor).
Oh, one more thing: ISO. The ISO setting has little to do with noise except as it indirectly affects the exposure settings on the camera (f-number and exposure time). That is, if you raise the ISO setting from 400 to 1600, then the camera will choose a combination of f-number and/or exposure time that is two stops different, and it is that which results in the greater noise in the photo, not the higher ISO setting, per se. Interestingly, if we keep the exposure the same (e.g. using M mode), then higher ISO settings are less noisy than lower ISO settings, but how much less can vary quite a bit depending on the sensor in the camera and the particular ISO settings used.