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Higher mega pixel cameras offer the ability to print larger images. For example a 6mp camera offers a resolution of 3000 x 2000 pixels. If you allow 300dpi (dots per inch) for print quality, this would give you a print of approx 10 in x 7 in. 3000 divided by 300 = 10, 2000 divided by 300 = approx 7 A 3.1mp camera offers a resolution of 2048 x 1536 pixels which gives a print size of 7in x 5in You can make bigger images, but you would need to accept that you would lower the quality of the image.

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16y ago
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15y ago

Megapixel Count

The fascination with megapixel count is, to a great degree, unwarranted if not entirely bogus. Most people will never print a photograph larger than 8 x 10", and a decent 5 MP image file will handle that to the standards of all but the crustiest perfectionist. Being one of those critters, I'm sure of that.

Megapixel count is a way of expressing the number of tiny sensors on the chip that takes the place of film. We'll call them pixels (although that's not technically accurate -- they're actually transistors).

Each pixel gathers information, expressed in computer language. This information includes the relative amounts of three different colors in the light, the brightness, and the information's exact location in the picture. The more pixels, the more detail the chip can gather -- in theory. In a very general way, it is like differences in film size: the bigger the film negative, the more detail in the photograph.

Now here's the catch. The smaller the pixel, the less light it can gather. As you add pixels to a sensor of a given size, they have to be smaller. A standard 1/18, 10 MP sensor in a small camera has crowded on it twice as many pixels as there are on a 5 MP chip the same size. There is more detail available, but as it gets darker, less light falls on each individual pixel, and they begin to have trouble delivering the goods to the processor. The signals get scrambled, and we have the "noise" that we associate with digital images taken in dim light. The same thing is true of the shadow areas of a brightly-lit photo. If we try to bring out detail in the shadows, we end up with noise. If we "smooth out" the noise, we lose detail.

You can see where we're going, here. A sensor with fewer pixels will deliver less data overall, but all else being equal will perform better in dim light. As long as we can "get by" with 6 MP, we will get overall better results than we are likely to get with a 13 MP chip, over the widest range of conditions. Some of this is corrected by sophisticated software in the camera's processor, but the basic equation remains. Poor data, poor image.

One of the reasons digital SLRs deliver better performance than smaller digital cameras is because their sensor chips are much larger. This means that a 10 MP chip in an SLR, while having the same number of pixels as a 10 MP camera with a smaller chip, will have much larger pixels, able to gather more light. To get pixels the same size in the smaller camera, we would have to drastically reduce the total number, to have room for the bigger pixels. It's like using a camera with -- you guessed it -- bigger film negatives.

The good news is, most consumer grade cameras perform extremely well for what they cost and the uses they are put to. But don't be carried away by Megapixels. The other features of the camera are far more important. In fact, all else being equal, fewer MP's may be a better choice. Even knowing this, the marketers will insist on more pixels, and the manufacturers will keep adding them for people who are impressed by numbers. But now you know better, don't you?

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15y ago

You can make larger prints from the images without sacrificing quality. The drawback to the higher numbers is that the file sizes become much larger. In my opinion, anything more than 8 megapixels is a waste of money for the average snapshot shooter who won't ever print anything larger than 8x10.

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15y ago

Compared to a 2 MP camera, a 3 MP camera has roughly 50% more available detail in comparable images.

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11y ago

Low pixel cameras don't make very good pictures. And the high pixel cameras look real.

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Q: What is the difference between a high pixel camera and a low pixel camera?
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What is the difference between a high-pixel camera and a low-pixel camera?

In general, higher Megapixels (MPs) are better if the pixel size is not reduced. So the sensor size needs to increase proportionately with the number of MPs. Why? Because a reduced pixel will gather less light, hence will be more noisy (poor signal to noise ratio). That inevitably leads to poor dynamic range (range of captured brightness levels). Nevertheless as the technology of manufacturing and data processing improves, it is possible to cope with incremental reduction in pixel size while holding on to image quality. e.g. jump from 7 to 8MPs on same sensor area. In general higher pixel camera will facilitate larger print size (all else being equal). For lab quality 8"x10" print (at 300DPI), at least 7.2Megapixels will be required. In practical terms, the type of picture desired dictates the number of MPs required. For studio-quality A4-size portraits or close-ups, especially wedding photos, you need a high-pixel camera . At the other extreme, if you just want to take snapshots of friends at parties, then only a low-pixel camera is needed: 5MP would be sufficient.


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