Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2014/05/07
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]So the Leica T uses software to compensate for lens shortcomings. I'm really shocked! But remember software correction of optical aberrations has been used for millennia. It is nature's way. Consider the human eye. The eye has a primitive optical system by photographic standards, basically an F3.5, 20mm FL non-achromatic doublet. The sharp image circle is only about 3 mm in the center of the fovea. All those lovely, crisp, wide angle images you see in your brain are constructed by software processing. Here is what goes on in that complex computer in back of the eyeball. The projected image is encoded, focus is corrected, edges of objects are enhanced, the direction of motion is sensed, colors are assigned to various portions of the image depending on which cells in the retina are activated, small image portions are stitched together as a function of eyeball position to form a whole percept, and an illusion of depth is created by the disparity of images from each eyeball. A pseudo image is created for blank spots (blind spot) in the retina. Further, geometric shapes are corrected so that they accord with experience. Objects viewed at a distance are made to appear larger. Colors constancy is maintained despite changes in the viewing light. And so on. Computer technology has reached the point where lens defects can be corrected in software more efficiently than in glass and certainly much cheaper. Glass and mechanical do dads are expensive. Microprocessors are cheap and getting cheaper. Why try to make a perfect lens to mount on a perfect camera body? Nature doesn't depend on perfect optics to provide a perfect image. Why should Leica? Larry Z