Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/04/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Hi Ted, I understand where you?re coming from. BUT?it does matter because digital isn?t like film. What happens to light as it encounters the digital sensor is different from what happens with film. The software (technically firmware) in the camera can account for the way light strikes the sensor. Because Leica knows the geometry of both the lenses and the way the little ?micro-lenses? that are placed over each light-sensing area of the sensor are designed, the engineers can make up for trade-offs in the design. Even the ?RAW? output of the camera is processed to some degree and the sophistication in processing can make a substantial difference in image quality without having to do anything else in, say, Lightroom. Most of this difference happens at the corners or the edges of your image and it?s about relatively small changes, although with wide-angle lenses the chances can be quite substantial. If you take a great image the lens coding will make it better. If you take an inferior image, well, no silk purses will be created. You still have to see. Hope this helps? Adam On Apr 6, 2014, at 9:42 PM, tedgrant at shaw.ca wrote: > The more I read of this coding crap the more I become absolutely convinced > it's nothing more than a bunch of techie crap to charge more money for > nothing more than a pile of useless techie crap!