Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2000/03/19
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]I understand Mike's posting perfectly. "Scientists" have reduced my field (violinmaking) to a bunch of result-free drivel with their wishful thinking. MTF might very well be a useful concept, but to reduce the whole of the qualities of a lens to one single parameter strikes me as, well, absurd minimalism. Simplification of concepts to numbers appeals greatly to scientific types, and is certainly a useful strategy for developing products, but in the acoustics field, at least, I've noticed that the science types like to zero in on the things they can measure as being the important things, and snub the things they can't measure as being unimportant (classical sour grapes, in case you missed my connection). In the main, it hasn't fooled violinists, however, and it doesn't sound like the approach fools every photographer, either. --Michael Darnton Date: Sun, 19 Mar 2000 18:45:17 +0100 From: "lucien@ubi.edu" <director@ubi.edu> Subject: Re: [Leica] apo 90 versus 4/150 Mike Johnston wrote: >I'm sympathetic to the temptation to compare things like MTF percentages >and extrapolate out to what "should be" the case, but it amounts to >wishful thinking--more careful research than that is required to find >the truth. There is more to "print quality" than lp/mm. Mike, I hope you can do better than that to convince us. ;-) By the way, do you really want to convince, or do you want to contradict Erwin whatever he say. You often give me the impression that you slightly misunderstand what he explain, in purpose. If it's true, it will never end. I hope I'm wrong. Lucien ______________________________________________________ Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com