I have found the current histogram to be rather useless with some high dynamic range and contrast images. Think a moonshot... moon has large areas of bright, but lots of contrast so not all the brightness is in the same point on the the histogram. Rather, it's distributed across a few stops. The large amount of very dark background (black sky) *completely* swamps the histogram of such a shot with on big spike on the left.

Pentax has been, historically, a company that builds equipment for photographers. I expect that any reply you might get will be along the lines of learn something about photography.

Perhaps, but it also tends to attract technical types (like myself). I am not an artsy photographer type (don't have the gift), but more of a technical photographer. As a "digital K1000 lightbox," I use it as a device for capturing pixels. As such I want to maximize signal/noise ratio and get the exposure correct. The "sunny-16" rule underexposed the moonshot by a good two stops with my setup.

What you are proposing amounts to the film technique of shoot and hope you get it right, then "develop" (on the computer now) to see if you did. Seems silly to me when it could be done in-camera. Photoshop/Gimp will let you generate a log historgram... try it sometime. For some images its indispensable for analysis.

-Cory

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* Cory Papenfuss                                                        *
* Electrical Engineering candidate Ph.D. graduate student               *
* Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University                   *
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