06-02-2014, 10:23 PM
DR is not a feature. Each sensor has a dynamic range, some a smaller than others
And comparing the DR values against portability and "always with me" attributes is a bit like comparing wide-angle to telephoto. Although I fully agree, a camera at my hand is better than one with a huuuuuuge DR resting at home because it's a challenge to carry the whole stuff.
I really enjoyed this discussion of today and put a small collection of pictures to my gallery with and without adjustments. It's not about "learn how to set up your camera, dude" - just suppose, I'm not always capable to set up the bloody thing properly. If you are, great, I bow my head to such a master. If I have all the time and concentration, I happen to adjust most of the buttons, switches and damn menu parameters. But less is more. And I can get good shots with a simpler camera, like the "buggy"-called Sigma Merills, which impresses me by it's quality and a lot absent buttons, very short menus and crappy slow software. Unbelievably this thing manages to output pictures ^_^
And comparing the DR values against portability and "always with me" attributes is a bit like comparing wide-angle to telephoto. Although I fully agree, a camera at my hand is better than one with a huuuuuuge DR resting at home because it's a challenge to carry the whole stuff.
I really enjoyed this discussion of today and put a small collection of pictures to my gallery with and without adjustments. It's not about "learn how to set up your camera, dude" - just suppose, I'm not always capable to set up the bloody thing properly. If you are, great, I bow my head to such a master. If I have all the time and concentration, I happen to adjust most of the buttons, switches and damn menu parameters. But less is more. And I can get good shots with a simpler camera, like the "buggy"-called Sigma Merills, which impresses me by it's quality and a lot absent buttons, very short menus and crappy slow software. Unbelievably this thing manages to output pictures ^_^