Archive for March, 2008

Live View Conundrum

Wednesday, March 26th, 2008

Just like face-detection has been the new feature in compact digital cameras for a while, live-view is the somewhat new feature for DSLR cameras. Indeed, most new DSLRs that came out in the last 6 months have this feature. As any feature, some people feel they need it, others could not care less.

Those who do not care for it can simply ignore it and move on. Those who are interested should know that all live-views are not created equal. That is the reason we have not added live-view to the feature list of DSLRs. Knowing that a camera has live-view is not so helpful because live-view implementations differ greatly, at least not until the perfect live-view exists.

Neocamera treats live-view as any other feature. DSLR camera reviews mention how live-view is implemented and how it works. Nothing else. A camera’s final rating is not influenced by a camera having live-view or not. Having live-view is neither a pro nor a con, it is simply one more feature for interested parties to look at.

One digital camera evolution that many people would like to see is for prosumer digital cameras, also called bridge cameras, to use large image sensors and interchangeable lenses. Such cameras would feature true exposure-priority preview, instead of live-view, the flexibility of interchangeable lenses and the image quality of large sensor cameras. They would also retain the quietness of fixed-lens cameras in a form factor smaller than DSLRs due to the use of an EVF (Electronic Viewfinder) instead of an OVF (Optical Viewfinder) and no space used up by a moving mirror. The key to keeping such cameras usable is to use a high-quality EVF such as the nearly 1 megapixel 0.44″ LCD used in the now-defunct Konica-Minolta Dimage A2.

Neocamera Blog Neocamera.com © Cybernium.

Digital Camera Ratings – Season 2 Episode 1

Sunday, March 23rd, 2008

Last time on Digital Camera Ratings….

LamborguiniThe coarseness of our ratings is somewhat arbitrary. Some sites use a precise rating system, with cameras rated from 0 to 10 with one or two decimal points, others have only two ratings. The reason for using a small number of ratings (4 in this case, could be 3 or 5, it’s not that important) is because there is a lot of subjectiveness in how important deficiencies are. We can point out deficiencies, but we can’t say how important they are to you.

Giving a precise rating for a camera, like 8.7, is in my opinion misleading. It may lead in something thinking that a camera with an 8.7 is better than one with an 8.6 rating. Then there is the question of how much better and if its worth the $$$ differences. How’s $75 for 0.1 difference? Note that a rating here is different then a measurement. It is not like saying than an engine is rated at 520hp, that is a measurement, just like megapixels or ISO.

Keeping ratings well distributed is the tough part. The main problem is that digital camera technology does not stand still. The result is a moving average which is impossible to track with fixed ratings. We thought of two approaches to deal with that: periodically re-rating cameras and using a relative scale. The former way is the more logical but proved problematic. We did it once when we had less than 50 reviews. Now that we have over 200 reviews, it is a gargantuan task. The latter way is simply confusing for readers. Imagine that all Good ratings were not equal… Is Excellent from 2 years ago is better or worse than Good from last week?

For those who take ratings very seriously, this poses two problems:

  • The average (in the numeric sense) camera gets a better than Average rating. Note that there is always skew here because we do not review all cameras and those that we review are more often than not near the top of their line.
  • Cameras rated Excellent differ in quality more than other ratings. Why? Because once the first cameras were given the top-rating, everything better got to ratings too. Over 3 years, that means you get the best camera from today with the same rating as the best camera from 3 years ago.

What readers have to do then, is to keep in mind that ratings are a guideline – that is one of the reason we chose a coarse rating system – and that the assessments, pros-and-cons, express reviews and full-reviews are there to expose the true story.

Neocamera Blog Neocamera.com © Cybernium.

Firefox & SeaMonkey Backspace Action

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

SeaMonkeyFirefoxSooner or later you will hit the Backspace key by accident! If you running Mozilla’s Firefox or SeaMonkey – the new Mozilla Suite – this causes the browser to go back one step in history. Often, while filling an online form or writing an email, I hit Backspace to make a correction and …wham… I lose everything that I typed in! Going forward in history does not always fix the problem due to they way forms are handled.

Fear not! There is a simple solution. The secret is the about:config URL. Just type it in the URL bar. If you are not in immediately, you’ll get a warning saying that it is dangerous… Just accept and you’ll be in for real. Then, in the entry field next to Filter, type backspace. This will filter out all the settings that have nothing to do with Backspace. In my setup, which is SeaMonkey 1.1.8, there is only one setting which remains: browser.backspace_action. Double click on the value at the end of that row (it should say 0) and enter the value 1 when the dialog box appears. Click OK and you’re done: The backspace key no longer steps back in the browser history.

Pentax K20D Full-Review Posted

Saturday, March 15th, 2008

Pentax K20DThe successor to the immensely successful Pentax K10D has just been reviewed at Neocamera. This is the Pentax flagship DSLR sporting a 14.6 megapixels CMOS sensor with the usual 1.5X crop-factor. Headline features include ISO 100 to 6400, including an expanded dynamic-range mode, built-in image stabilization, rain-worthy weatherproof body, dust-reduction, dust-detection and the requisite live-view. The only thing missing from the K20D is a full-resolution high-speed continuous drive. Anyone who is not a sport photographer should definitely take a look at the Pentax K20D.

Nearly every K10D owner is probably asking himself if he should upgrade to to the K20D. Since most changes are evolutionary and nearly all camera controls remain identical, we highlight in green every time the two cameras did something different. For completeness, all functionality differences between the Pentax K20D and K10D are enumerated in the last page of the review as well.

Neocamera Blog Neocamera.com © Cybernium.