Paulus Posted May 3, 2017 Author Share #261 Posted May 3, 2017 Advertisement (gone after registration) Yes, it is impossible to feel a pixel. Buick learned that over 30 years ago. . you mean over 70 years ago? Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Advertisement Posted May 3, 2017 Posted May 3, 2017 Hi Paulus, Take a look here M 11 will be around in less than 4 years. The speculations and facts.. I'm sure you'll find what you were looking for!
Herr Barnack Posted May 3, 2017 Share #262 Posted May 3, 2017 (edited) How did we get to "bleeding edge technology" all of a sudden - I smell a straw man! Back to innovation: removing stupid video finally ditching pointless USB (you couldn't even charge with) improved weather sealing improved sensor improved processor improved viewfinder ditching the crappy EVF in favour of something that at least comparable rather than behind other offerings ISO dial thinner - though that's arguably retrograde ... One man's poison ... Regarding bleeding edge technology, the M11 should incorporate an innovation that has heretofore been absent from digital M cameras. There should be a button that will cause the camera to shoot a stream of extra strength oleoresin capsicum pepper spray at least five meters to disable thieves who would rob us of our mega-dollar M camera and lenses. Edited May 3, 2017 by Carlos Danger Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
105012 Posted May 3, 2017 Share #263 Posted May 3, 2017 replace the metal masks for creating the frame lines with a micro-led or oled display. This would enable single, perfectly sized frame lines for any focal length and distance. Also would enable to display other informations in the viewfinder. This could replace the 7 segment display at the bottom of the viewfinder at the same time. If one would want to be bold, even focus peaking could be shown inside the viewfinder with the display. More lenses. Perhaps a 150/f4, some tiny f2.8 lenses. What about a modern collapsible lens, or a true macro lens, a pancake lens? Agree x 2! Personally I am happy with the 135 APO for long focal length on an M using the OVF, but would think that the micro-led/oled display could switch to an in viewfinder EVF mode for longer focal lengths. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
rwnheaney Posted May 4, 2017 Share #264 Posted May 4, 2017 (edited) I do not care one wit about being "on the bleeding edge of digital camera technology" ... What I want is a camera that presents the use experience of the Leica M which has been honed and refined over the past half century so nicely. Frankly, the M-D and the M10 just as they are now do this well enough for my satisfaction, the M-D with the present M10's viewfinder and NO OTHER CHANGES AT ALL are what I'd like most.But presumably also with M10 size (thinner) than MD (fatter)? Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Edited May 4, 2017 by rwnheaney Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jager Posted May 4, 2017 Share #265 Posted May 4, 2017 Regarding resolution, 24mp or thereabouts is likely to be the ceiling. Until/unless Leica decides to incorporate on-sensor vibration reduction, I wouldn't expect to see anything significantly beyond that. It seems that 24mp is, indeed, the sweet spot for a camera designed primarily to be used handheld. Some might recall the wailing and gnashing of teeth when Nikon released its 36mp D800. Images were soft. They were soft because Nikon, in its hurry to embrace the megapixel arms race, put marketing in front of physics. The M8 had a pixel pitch of 6.87um. The M9/Monochrom essentially maintained that pixel pitch (actually bumping it a hair to 6.89um). The M240/M246 dropped considerably, to 5.97um. The M10 also rings in at 6um. It would seem that that - ~6um - is the floor. There is no denying the advantages of resolution. When I look at the 50mp files from my Hasselblad CFV-50c digital back, I'm entranced. Alas, those benefits come at a cost. That digital back with its 5.3um pixel pitch requires a tripod (or strobes) in order to consistently realize its resolution. Yes, I can and do handhold it. But the keeper rate versus film (which, with its much larger "sensor" area, serves as an analog to a larger pixel pitch) plummets. It's notable that Nikon shoots for marketing braggadocio in its prosumer models, but retains a very conservative 21mp/6.41um pixel pitch in its flagship D5. There's a reason for that. And it would seem that Leica's engineers have come to the same conclusion. 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Steve Spencer Posted May 4, 2017 Share #266 Posted May 4, 2017 Regarding resolution, 24mp or thereabouts is likely to be the ceiling. Until/unless Leica decides to incorporate on-sensor vibration reduction, I wouldn't expect to see anything significantly beyond that. It seems that 24mp is, indeed, the sweet spot for a camera designed primarily to be used handheld. Some might recall the wailing and gnashing of teeth when Nikon released its 36mp D800. Images were soft. They were soft because Nikon, in its hurry to embrace the megapixel arms race, put marketing in front of physics. The M8 had a pixel pitch of 6.87um. The M9/Monochrom essentially maintained that pixel pitch (actually bumping it a hair to 6.89um). The M240/M246 dropped considerably, to 5.97um. The M10 also rings in at 6um. It would seem that that - ~6um - is the floor. There is no denying the advantages of resolution. When I look at the 50mp files from my Hasselblad CFV-50c digital back, I'm entranced. Alas, those benefits come at a cost. That digital back with its 5.3um pixel pitch requires a tripod (or strobes) in order to consistently realize its resolution. Yes, I can and do handhold it. But the keeper rate versus film (which, with its much larger "sensor" area, serves as an analog to a larger pixel pitch) plummets. It's notable that Nikon shoots for marketing braggadocio in its prosumer models, but retains a very conservative 21mp/6.41um pixel pitch in its flagship D5. There's a reason for that. And it would seem that Leica's engineers have come to the same conclusion. There are two simple solutions if handholding is an issue. First, as I think we all recognize it is simple enough to increase the shutter speed for the shot. It is not hard to get sharp shots with a 36mp sensor handheld if you shoot at 1/2X focal length for most people. Second, you can always downsize a bigger file to 24mp and it will have exactly the same handhold ability. For those times you can use the 36mp, like when high shutter speeds are easy or on a tripod the extra mp would help, and for those times handhold would cause an issue you can just downsize to 24mp. I see no reason at all that using a camera primarily handheld should limit the resolution. The problem with a few people (and it was mainly a tempest in a teapot among some forum participants and not a widespread issue -- the camera has sold very well and has high ratings of satisfaction) had handholding the Nikon D800 is that they simply didn't adjust to the higher mps by increasing the shutter speed. This is really a user problem and not a camera problem. Oh, and by the way the reason the Nikon D5 is 21mp is because this camera is used for things like sports Nikon wants very high frames per second and the limitation is computing power and not handhold ability. You just can't push enough data with camera's current computing power for more mp if you want to keep the fps up. That has and will change as computing power in cameras improves. In 8 years as computing power increase fully expect a 36mp D7. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
wlaidlaw Posted May 4, 2017 Share #267 Posted May 4, 2017 Advertisement (gone after registration) Regarding resolution, 24mp or thereabouts is likely to be the ceiling. Until/unless Leica decides to incorporate on-sensor vibration reduction, I wouldn't expect to see anything significantly beyond that. It seems that 24mp is, indeed, the sweet spot for a camera designed primarily to be used handheld. Some might recall the wailing and gnashing of teeth when Nikon released its 36mp D800. Images were soft. They were soft because Nikon, in its hurry to embrace the megapixel arms race, put marketing in front of physics. The M8 had a pixel pitch of 6.87um. The M9/Monochrom essentially maintained that pixel pitch (actually bumping it a hair to 6.89um). The M240/M246 dropped considerably, to 5.97um. The M10 also rings in at 6um. It would seem that that - ~6um - is the floor. There is no denying the advantages of resolution. When I look at the 50mp files from my Hasselblad CFV-50c digital back, I'm entranced. Alas, those benefits come at a cost. That digital back with its 5.3um pixel pitch requires a tripod (or strobes) in order to consistently realize its resolution. Yes, I can and do handhold it. But the keeper rate versus film (which, with its much larger "sensor" area, serves as an analog to a larger pixel pitch) plummets. It's notable that Nikon shoots for marketing braggadocio in its prosumer models, but retains a very conservative 21mp/6.41um pixel pitch in its flagship D5. There's a reason for that. And it would seem that Leica's engineers have come to the same conclusion. While no fan of the Sony A series FF mirrorless cameras, they seem to manage their 40MP sensors pretty well. Extra pixels confers "crop-ability" and more flexibility on an image in PP. However if more pixels would be at the expense of extra noise, I would understand sticking with 24 but extending the usable ISO even further. I wonder if there might be a middle ground of say 34MP with noise a bit less than the M10, for the next generation of sensor. The problem Leica has is that with its volumes, it is going to be very lucky to get the "bleeding edge" of sensor technology. Sometimes they can surprise us with things like the retina resolution EVF on the SL, which I think I am correct in saying, that nobody has yet surpassed. Having an M240, an M10, though an improvement in some areas, was not enough to tempt me. Would an M240 successor (I do use video occasionally) with the same 24MP but other improvements tempt me? I slightly doubt it. So in the end, more pixels may be needed to tempt repeat customers like me, into the dealers. Wilson Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jmahto Posted May 4, 2017 Share #268 Posted May 4, 2017 Regarding resolution, 24mp or thereabouts is likely to be the ceiling. Until/unless Leica decides to incorporate on-sensor vibration reduction, I wouldn't expect to see anything significantly beyond that. It seems that 24mp is, indeed, the sweet spot for a camera designed primarily to be used handheld. Some might recall the wailing and gnashing of teeth when Nikon released its 36mp D800. Images were soft. They were soft because Nikon, in its hurry to embrace the megapixel arms race, put marketing in front of physics. The M8 had a pixel pitch of 6.87um. The M9/Monochrom essentially maintained that pixel pitch (actually bumping it a hair to 6.89um). The M240/M246 dropped considerably, to 5.97um. The M10 also rings in at 6um. It would seem that that - ~6um - is the floor. There is no denying the advantages of resolution. When I look at the 50mp files from my Hasselblad CFV-50c digital back, I'm entranced. Alas, those benefits come at a cost. That digital back with its 5.3um pixel pitch requires a tripod (or strobes) in order to consistently realize its resolution. Yes, I can and do handhold it. But the keeper rate versus film (which, with its much larger "sensor" area, serves as an analog to a larger pixel pitch) plummets. It's notable that Nikon shoots for marketing braggadocio in its prosumer models, but retains a very conservative 21mp/6.41um pixel pitch in its flagship D5. There's a reason for that. And it would seem that Leica's engineers have come to the same conclusion. Solution is to stitch. It is easy to get 50mp files by stitching three 24mp frames of slightly longer lens (40mm to 28mm fov, 90mm to 60mm fov). Of course it works only for limited scenes but I will happily carry M for landscapes over Hassy. 2 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
fsprow Posted May 4, 2017 Share #269 Posted May 4, 2017 (edited) Really interesting discussion. I have a Hasselblad H6D - 100c (100MP) camera. It has a large sensor (53.4 x 40mm) and 4.6 x 4.6um pixels. I have found that I can get equivalent results between tripod and carefully hand held (and it's pretty heavy!) if my shutter speed is 1/250 or higher. The resolution and color quality is amazing under those conditions and with a CMOS sensor not difficult to use at high ISO's in most cases. Edited May 4, 2017 by fsprow Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paulus Posted May 5, 2017 Author Share #270 Posted May 5, 2017 There are two simple solutions if handholding is an issue. First, as I think we all recognize it is simple enough to increase the shutter speed for the shot. It is not hard to get sharp shots with a 36mp sensor handheld if you shoot at 1/2X focal length for most people. Second, you can always downsize a bigger file to 24mp and it will have exactly the same handhold ability. For those times you can use the 36mp, like when high shutter speeds are easy or on a tripod the extra mp would help, and for those times handhold would cause an issue you can just downsize to 24mp. I see no reason at all that using a camera primarily handheld should limit the resolution. The problem with a few people (and it was mainly a tempest in a teapot among some forum participants and not a widespread issue -- the camera has sold very well and has high ratings of satisfaction) had handholding the Nikon D800 is that they simply didn't adjust to the higher mps by increasing the shutter speed. This is really a user problem and not a camera problem. Oh, and by the way the reason the Nikon D5 is 21mp is because this camera is used for things like sports Nikon wants very high frames per second and the limitation is computing power and not handhold ability. You just can't push enough data with camera's current computing power for more mp if you want to keep the fps up. That has and will change as computing power in cameras improves. In 8 years as computing power increase fully expect a 36mp D7. Or place the camera on a stone: http://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/252668-the-sunset-thread-open-for-all/?p=3184679 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
visoflex Posted May 12, 2017 Share #271 Posted May 12, 2017 No video for me on the M11, keep that for a separate 240 based product line. What I would like is a one frame viewfinder. Correct frame for the lens in use at the time. With electronic frame lines, this should not be beyond the whit of man. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Eric1 Posted May 22, 2017 Share #272 Posted May 22, 2017 I would like to see the cursive Leica logo back on the top plate, 36mp, and autofocus option. I think it's inevitable that future M's will increase mp's and add autofocus option. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeff S Posted May 23, 2017 Share #273 Posted May 23, 2017 (edited) No video for me on the M11, keep that for a separate 240 based product line. What I would like is a one frame viewfinder. Correct frame for the lens in use at the time. With electronic frame lines, this should not be beyond the whit of man. The frame lines on the M10 are still mechanical; only the illumination of them is electronic (rather than through the former exterior window). https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/66999-anatomy-of-the-leica-m8-framelines/ Jeff Edited May 23, 2017 by Jeff S Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
jdlaing Posted May 23, 2017 Share #274 Posted May 23, 2017 The frame lines on the M10 are still mechanical; only the illumination of them is electronic (rather than through the former exterior window).https://www.l-camera-forum.com/topic/66999-anatomy-of-the-leica-m8-framelines/ Jeff I believe they were on the M240 as well. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jeff S Posted May 23, 2017 Share #275 Posted May 23, 2017 (edited) I believe they were on the M240 as well.Of course.... my link to the M8 anatomy is because it hasn't changed. Edit....If you mean the internal illumination, yes that began with the M240. Jeff Edited May 23, 2017 by Jeff S 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
Paulus Posted August 12, 2017 Author Share #276 Posted August 12, 2017 In the interview with Stefan Daniel : http://www.l-camera-forum.com/leica-aktuell/2017/01/leica-m10-interview/?utm_source=luf170201&utm_medium=E-Mail He says two important things: The Leica M 11 will get into production sooner than the interval M 240 - M 10. ( 17:00 - 20:00 minute ). Also it will be called M 11. The Leica M will always be the best camera for M lenses, hence the new sensor of the M 10. The development of the M 11 has not started, but we are welcome to speculate. Leica will read the speculations and act accordingly, using the Leica user Forum like one easy marketing tool. This gives us , not only means to influence the development of the M 11, but also gives us responsibility. Some (factual) speculations: The M 11 will be the same "33,7 mm" size body. The Leica MP 10 will be sooner as expected ( if it will come ). The iso knob will stay as part of the philosofy : you can prepare the camera for action without looking on the menu. My wishes at the moment: none. Sensor could be a 56 Mp sensor. The M10 still on a 70 per day assembling rate. M 240 will stop being made? ( at least not at this moment ) . Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
leetmode Posted August 12, 2017 Share #277 Posted August 12, 2017 The option to turn of LENR... 1 Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
pgh Posted August 12, 2017 Share #278 Posted August 12, 2017 (edited) Regarding resolution, 24mp or thereabouts is likely to be the ceiling. Until/unless Leica decides to incorporate on-sensor vibration reduction, I wouldn't expect to see anything significantly beyond that. It seems that 24mp is, indeed, the sweet spot for a camera designed primarily to be used handheld. Some might recall the wailing and gnashing of teeth when Nikon released its 36mp D800. Images were soft. They were soft because Nikon, in its hurry to embrace the megapixel arms race, put marketing in front of physics. The M8 had a pixel pitch of 6.87um. The M9/Monochrom essentially maintained that pixel pitch (actually bumping it a hair to 6.89um). The M240/M246 dropped considerably, to 5.97um. The M10 also rings in at 6um. It would seem that that - ~6um - is the floor. There is no denying the advantages of resolution. When I look at the 50mp files from my Hasselblad CFV-50c digital back, I'm entranced. Alas, those benefits come at a cost. That digital back with its 5.3um pixel pitch requires a tripod (or strobes) in order to consistently realize its resolution. Yes, I can and do handhold it. But the keeper rate versus film (which, with its much larger "sensor" area, serves as an analog to a larger pixel pitch) plummets. It's notable that Nikon shoots for marketing braggadocio in its prosumer models, but retains a very conservative 21mp/6.41um pixel pitch in its flagship D5. There's a reason for that. And it would seem that Leica's engineers have come to the same conclusion. My thousands of sharp, hand held pictures from my 645D, D800, A7rII (the only one with stabilization) and Rx1rII disagree. The 645D was the hardest to get sharp handheld, but still not really a problem. Hell, I hardly ever use a tripod. If anything you can do 1/1.5-2 focal length if you want. No big deal. A 40 mp M would be great, and completely useable. It's not Leica's priority, fine - but if you're getting to pure IQ - Leica still isn't at the top. If 24 mp was truly a ceiling you wouldn't see the success of these other cameras. Edited August 12, 2017 by pgh Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
wlaidlaw Posted August 12, 2017 Share #279 Posted August 12, 2017 If it was either/or, I would rather have IBIS (5 axis) rather than more pixels. Ideally of course both. My suspicion is that then next big technical advance will either be curved sensors or a move away from Bayer pattern, with its inevitable compromises. Curved sensors, of course would require different lenses as the M lenses are carefully designed to produce a plane image. However, in all this, I want an update for the M240 not the M10. Wilson Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
LocalHero1953 Posted August 12, 2017 Share #280 Posted August 12, 2017 I would accept more pixels, but would rather stay at 24mp if higher resolution limited improvements to noise, dynamic range and high ISO colour. Link to post Share on other sites More sharing options...
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