What I was referring to was that the limitations, such as diffractions limits, signal/noise ratio etc, has made further increasing of the number of pixels less likely. This has been discussed for quite a while, so nobody should be surprised.
DagT
P� mandag, 20. oktober 2003, kl. 23:19, skrev graywolf:
How have you been discussing for months the fact that sensor densities have not gone up in the past year? Months ago all you could discuss is that they had not gone up in the last few months which would prove nothing as the high-end cameras are usually replaced annually and introduced in time for the Christmas market, in fact I may be a month ahead of the market in bringing it up now. This is the first sign I have seen that the digital camera market is (maybe) beginning to stabilize. In the normal course of events I would have expected 6mp P&S out for this Christmas, if not 8mp 2/3-frame DSLRs, I would actually have expected no change in the full-frame cameras as they have little competition in the market.
Dag T wrote:P� mandag, 20. oktober 2003, kl. 18:40, skrev John Francis:Nothing new here - it's just the normal semiconductor technology progression.Yep, that was what I was saying in the lines you omitted in you response. We�ve been discussing this for months :-)
DagT
-- graywolf http://graywolfphoto.com
"You might as well accept people as they are, you are not going to be able to change them anyway."

