Thread Rating:
  • 0 Vote(s) - 0 Average
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
Is it the end of SA mount ???
#1
It seems Sigma will make camera bodies in L mount within the cooperation Sigma-Leica-Panasonic 
We know Camera business is not important to Sigma however the CEO Kazuto Yamaki  keeps making cameras because of Yamaki's father  dream of being a camera manufacturer 

https://petapixel.com/2016/10/12/sigma-s...ie-father/

Now they are entering L mount along with Leica and Panasonic, and they will be making L mount camera
will we see a full frame Foveon sensor ???
It's unlikely that Sigma will continue supporting two mount, will this mean end of SA mount
#2
There is nothing good about foveon sensors (aliasing, very low DR and very bad high ISO performance due to the very high loss of light, and since years not even "every colour per pixel". So, not sure why it would matter if there will be a FF foveon sensor?

Sigma will just bring the ART series and some tele zooms to the SL mount in the beginning, which is why Panasonic needed to bring them on board to begin with (they of course realise that starting FF by themselves is not doable). What Sigma will do on the camera side for themselves is not that interesting.
#3
Your opinion about Foveon sensors simply lacks of experience with it. You keep up bullshitting about aliasing, false sharpness and other crap, but so far I haven't seen it in any print. But I fully agree on the ISO performance and I also think there's no need to go FF with Foveon. There are more than enough FF sensors or bigger ones, and there's only one app to develop the Sigma-RAWs (if one doens't want to waste a lot of diskspace with Adobes's DNG monster files). Sigma's Photo Pro app needs a lot of work to get close to normal RAW development speed.

One can also criticize Sigma's cameras, but their menu system is much better than Fuji's or Sony's.
#4
(09-25-2018, 08:42 AM)JJ_SO Wrote: Your opinion about Foveon sensors simply lacks of experience with it. You keep up bullshitting about aliasing, false sharpness and other crap, but so far I haven't seen it in any print. But I fully agree on the ISO performance and I also think there's no need to go FF with Foveon. There are more than enough FF sensors or bigger ones, and there's only one app to develop the Sigma-RAWs (if one doens't want to waste a lot of diskspace with Adobes's DNG monster files). Sigma's Photo Pro app needs a lot of work to get close to normal RAW development speed.

One can also criticize Sigma's cameras, but their menu system is much better than Fuji's or Sony's.

It is not opinion, it is fact. No AA-filter means fake detail and false sharpness. Foveon sensors do not have AA-filters. Ergo: fake detail and false sharpness. The bullshit crap from Sigma/Foveon about how they do not need AA-filters because of whatever is just that, bullshit crap.

Calling Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem "bullshit" is rich, it is a very well established theorem. That some people get impressed by the fake sharpness due to aliasing, is fine.
#5
(09-25-2018, 08:42 AM)JJ_SO Wrote: Your opinion about Foveon sensors simply lacks of experience with it. You keep up bullshitting about aliasing, false sharpness and other crap, but so far I haven't seen it in any print. But I fully agree on the ISO performance and I also think there's no need to go FF with Foveon. There are more than enough FF sensors or bigger ones, and there's only one app to develop the Sigma-RAWs (if one doens't want to waste a lot of diskspace with Adobes's DNG monster files). Sigma's Photo Pro app needs a lot of work to get close to normal RAW development speed.

One can also criticize Sigma's cameras, but their menu system is much better than Fuji's or Sony's.

The key to the modern day photographic industry is good sales.......that quite simply excludes the foveon sensor!
#6
(09-25-2018, 11:21 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: It is not opinion, it is fact. No AA-filter means fake detail and false sharpness. Foveon sensors do not have AA-filters. Ergo: fake detail and false sharpness. The bullshit crap from Sigma/Foveon about how they do not need AA-filters because of whatever is just that, bullshit crap.

Calling Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem "bullshit" is rich, it is a very well established theorem. That some people get impressed by the fake sharpness due to aliasing, is fine.

Don't call your opinion fact: The picture recording technique of a sensor is a rasterizing of reality, analogue structures which become transferred into 0 and 1, rather simplified. Sigma/Foveon does not put another step (actullay two extra artifical steps, softening and re-sharpening) in between, which most Bayer sensors have just to make the green blue green red pattern less visible.

The only faking part is the Bayer aspect, while Foveon takes reality as real as possible (for a digital sensor).

I also don't know any of Terry Pratchett's picture painting gnomes, who really paint - all printers use the same nozzle patterns and the ink just flows together, no matter if you put a fake mushy AntiAliasing filter in between or not.

You constantly look through a softented array of pixels and call the lack of the softening part "fake sharpness", that's rather bold and pretty stupid - on the contrary, there's no need to add extra sharpness like all the RAW converters do for Bayer pattern pictures. the softening AA filter leads to two extra loops - make the pixel structure melt and then re-sharpen it again, to regain some details. That's the real fake part! Not the Foveon sensor.

And as for Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem: That was articulated decades ago the development of Foveon sensors. Your choice to stick with stone age theorems which adequately described a pattern with only two dimensions - because there was no third available at the time of the postulation.

(09-25-2018, 11:24 AM)davidmanze Wrote: The key to the modern day photographic industry is good sales.......that quite simply excludes the foveon sensor!

If there were no Foveon sensors around, the Sigma Art lenses would not have become such outstanding optical instruments.
#7
You don't need an AA filter once you exceed a certain resolution.
Chief Editor - opticallimits.com

Doing all things Canon, MFT, Sony and Fuji
#8
According to BC, that means "fake detail and false sharpness".  Dodgy

There's no bat big enough to transform this into some person's brain...  Big Grin
#9
Correction: you don't need an AA-filter once you exceed the diffraction softening effects of the optics. Higher resolutions do not change Nyquist-Shannon.

(09-25-2018, 11:46 AM)JJ_SO Wrote:
(09-25-2018, 11:21 AM)Brightcolours Wrote: It is not opinion, it is fact. No AA-filter means fake detail and false sharpness. Foveon sensors do not have AA-filters. Ergo: fake detail and false sharpness. The bullshit crap from Sigma/Foveon about how they do not need AA-filters because of whatever is just that, bullshit crap.

Calling Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem "bullshit" is rich, it is a very well established theorem. That some people get impressed by the fake sharpness due to aliasing, is fine.

Don't call your opinion fact: The picture recording technique of a sensor is a rasterizing of reality, analogue structures which become transferred into 0 and 1, rather simplified. Sigma/Foveon does not put another step (actullay two extra artifical steps, softening and re-sharpening) in between, which most Bayer sensors have just to make the green blue green red pattern less visible.

The only faking part is the Bayer aspect, while Foveon takes reality as real as possible (for a digital sensor).

I also don't know any of Terry Pratchett's picture painting gnomes, who really paint - all printers use the same nozzle patterns and the ink just flows together, no matter if you put a fake mushy AntiAliasing filter in between or not.

You constantly look through a softented array of pixels and call the lack of the softening part "fake sharpness", that's rather bold and pretty stupid - on the contrary, there's no need to add extra sharpness like all the RAW converters do for Bayer pattern pictures. the softening AA filter leads to two extra loops - make the pixel structure melt and then re-sharpen it again, to regain some details. That's the real fake part! Not the Foveon sensor.

And as for Nyquist-Shannon sampling theorem: That was articulated decades ago the development of Foveon sensors. Your choice to stick with stone age theorems which adequately described a pattern with only two dimensions - because there was no third available at the time of the postulation.

(09-25-2018, 11:24 AM)davidmanze Wrote: The key to the modern day photographic industry is good sales.......that quite simply excludes the foveon sensor!

If there were no Foveon sensors around, the Sigma Art lenses would not have become such outstanding optical instruments.

What I wrote is fact, what you bring against that is just ill-informed opinion.
The world does NOT magically align to a grid of square pixels. The grid of square pixels is exactly what causes aliases. It is exactly the reason you do need an AA-filter to avoid fake sharpness/false detail.

Bayer CFA has NOTHING to do with this, nothing to do with aliasing.
Besides that, the current Sigma foveon sensors have LESS resolution in two channels than you claim. You need the same demosaicing to get to converted pixels as you do with Bayer CFA or what Fuji has to do with its CFA. 

What you write about Nyquist-Shannon shows a total no-understanding about sampling, about what the theorem is about and why it does apply, also with Foveon sensors. No idea why you feel that Sigma somehow gives 3D images, and no idea why you think Nyquist-Shannon would not apply to 3D, anyway.

On printers: not every printer uses the same dithering algorithms. And the ink does not flow together, you should look at the printed results up close sometime. The dithering is done to simulate different colours, not to obfuscate pixels. You can still see pixels and aliasing, "flowing ink" does not blur that all together. Maybe if you use water to muddy the printed results?
#10
It's Nyquist, Harry. And dead since 1974. Maybe you need to refresh your knowledge about the guy's theory.
  


Forum Jump:


Users browsing this thread:
1 Guest(s)