I thought ISO100 was Canon's standard and 50 was simulated, like the D300s's "L1.0" ISO100 quivalent?

I thought ISO100 was Canon's standard and 50 was simulated, like the D300s's "L1.0" ISO100 quivalent?
Just wondering what you all think to the idea that D-SLR camera technology has reached, or is about to reach, a peak? I read recently that one of the top tech guys at Nikon seems to think so.
If this is the case then I'm wondering what they are going to do about it. They can't just keep on making cameras with more megapixels and expect us to upgrade. How will they persuade us to buy the next expensive D-SLR? More movie modes?Thoughts? :shrug:
personally i would like to see them at 60mp, decent dynamic range, iso 20 - 36000, 20fps, low or no noise.

Just give me 15mp and Noiseless images @3200 iso and i will be delighted.
Hmm..How does an internal zoom sound for more accurate focusing.
ie, 500mm will still only be 500mm but you can zoom in further to be more accurate.
Bit like Live View Zoom only TTL.
Well, I thought we would have got further than this.....Who would have thought we have what we got now, say 10yrs back.
Actually the early days of digital was quite inventive - look at the Coolpix 990 with it's twist body, the flat Canon RC -250, the Sony Mavica FD that recorded to a floppy disk - it took time for digital photography kit to become rather dull.Even these new cameras are very traditional in the way they look and operate - basically a box stuck on the end of the lens, which is the way it had to be with film. That will surely change over time. And manufacturers will get more and more out of smaller sensors.
Actually the early days of digital was quite inventive - look at the Coolpix 990 with it's twist body, the flat Canon RC -250, the Sony Mavica FD that recorded to a floppy disk - it took time for digital photography kit to become rather dull.
I'm sure some of the ideas were a bit off the wall and didn't work so well but others fell by the wayside early on as I'm sure consumers want what they know rather than what they need.
You may be right - however, the physical size of a GPS reciever and a Wi-Fi transmitter at present prohibits it for now, I hope...I still doubt we'll see them incorporated across the board in the forseeable future...

If they can fit WiFi in an SD card it can't take up that much space.

If they can fit WiFi in an SD card it can't take up that much space.
You've seen an Iphone yeah?![]()
It's a toy - and what happens to me when I'm out of coverage in the Jungle or something?
Use a memory cardSeriously a short range 50m wifi connection would be an absolute bonus for tethered shooting. You know you want it :rules:
It's a toy - and what happens to me when I'm out of coverage in the Jungle or something?
This may be a loooooong way off, but I'd like to see the emergence of new sensor technologies that are better than the human eye e.g. a holographic sensor which eliminates the need for focusing because it can capture the entire scene as though you focused at every point and exposed at every available aperture, but all done in a fraction of a second.
Then when you're back at base you could choose the focus point and aperture setting. Imagine an almost infinite number of variations of any one particular scene.
Seems far-fetched? Maybe not...![]()