I think that some fine tuning of the firmware n the *ist D will take care of the minor discrepancies between it and the Canon D10. I do like the ability to use the larger Adobe RGBcolor space in the *ist D. I own a Canon D30, D60, and a Powershhot G5 in addition to my *ist D. I'm pretty happy with the *ist D. Great build quality and great results, so far.

Len
---
* There's no place like 127.0.0.1



From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: What DSLR Improvements I'd Like To See
Date: Tue, 28 Oct 2003 13:36:29 -0600 (CST)

On Mon, 27 Oct 2003 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:

> Or maybe it means the sensor Pentax is using is not quite as good as Canon's.
> I tend to think one cannot draw any conclusions yet.


There is some evidence that the Canon sensor is a bit better, or Canon's
handling of it is better.  It's a more developed technology than the
sensor in the *istD/D100.

However, I do think that some of the problem is not the lenses but what
digital post-processing does to the images from the lenses.  I don't
recall there being a great lamenting of chromatic aberration in Pentax
lenses back when Fujichrome Velvia was king.  I KNOW that some truly
great Nikon lenses exhibit problems on Nikon digitals that they did not on
film, and the Kodak N14 is almost legendary for inducing funky performance
on very fine lenses.

Try comparing the *istD to the Canon D30, which was Canon's first digital
camera.  That sort of points out how far Canon has come, and how good
the *istD is for a first DSLR.

DJE


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