Hi,

Although, the LCD has a high DPI, you are still looking at a
"downsampled" image. Depending on which algorithm the camera uses to
calculate the preview, the resulting preview image may be soft. Canon
could probably have used a better algorithm, but such algorithm would
likely require more CPU cycles. So either you'd have to wait longer or
you'd have to accept shorter battery life. Tradeoffs, tradeoffs.

It's been a while since last time I shot with my 10D, but I don't
recall the preview images being downright soft. But I also don't
recall being to tell if an image was in critical sharp focus or a tad
soft. Not on the full-frame preview anyway. If you zoom in all the way
you should have no trouble finding the plane of focus.

Tom

On 2/10/07, Valencic Miha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
It took a while to test this, but I finally did it. To summarize, what
is the problem in the first place: the images, shown (previewed) on the
camera's look soft -- they are not as sharp as they should be.
Now, this does not make sense, as the camera's LCD screen has 282 DPI
resolution (if I calculated that correctly). 2.08" x 1.39" with 230k
pixels in it.

Is there anyone, who gets a sharp preview image on his/her camera's LCD
preview? (20D, 30D, 10D, 5D?)
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