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Try it and see how bad 720p looks.As everybody knows the AF100 has only 800 TV lines of resolution. I asked myself, if it is then better to shoot in 720p. Should the picture look sharper than in 1080p?
As everybody knows the AF100 has only 800 TV lines of resolution. I asked myself, if it is then better to shoot in 720p. Should the picture look sharper than in 1080p?
Thanks!
I haven't measured it but it's much higher and Sony claims 1000 lines which I have no doubt is somewhere near that. I never miss detail on the F3 as I did with the AF100.
Really? So the EX1 has aliasing???With significant aliasing according to the BBC camera test. 800-850 lines clean is as good as 1080p gets. Any more and you will get aliasing. This is true of the format regardless of camera.
Of course it does. Just not enough to be a problem, as they tuned the OLPF about right on the EX1.Really? So the EX1 has aliasing???
Sony claims 1000 TVl/ph (TV lines per picture height) resolution, and I see that on the test charts. There's a bit of aliasing past that point, but not so much as to be problematic. Picking an optical low-pass filter for a sensor is always a tradeoff: ensure attenuation at the sampling frequency and you risk losing too much high-frequency information; keep that sharpness and risk distracting aliasing and moir©. Sony seems to have split the difference finely; if I boost the detail setting the aliasing becomes apparent, but at the default setting (detail 0), or with detail off (roughly equivalent to detail -30) it's hardly visible on the test charts-and in the real world it simply isn't a problem.
Of course it does. Just not enough to be a problem, as they tuned the OLPF about right on the EX1.
Whether a camera "has" aliasing or not, is usually never the question, as they pretty much all do. The question is "how much". And that can be optimized with proper sensor design.
Here's the quote from Adam Wilt's review of the EX1: