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Fjuji x20 eliminates Bayer Sensor scheme which forces shooting in jpg /or must translate Raw before you can work on them. Comments? #1
vidpixarts@gmail.com's picture
by vidpixarts@gmail.com
February 21, 2013 - 6:19am

Here is a link to a NYTimes review of Fuji x20 from Gadgetwise
The whole review is below the link. Here is what I am asking about:

New Sensor scheme X-TRANS SENSOR /TO REPLACE BAYER ARRAY REDUCING moire forces you to shoot jpg.

The need to translate Fuji raw before you can edit raw in the likes of programs that do such editing.

HERE IS THE KEY PARAGRAPH: There is a trade off though. Photo editing products like Photoshop are made to work on shots taken using Bayer arrays. So you either must shoot JPEG images (not RAW) or add a step to processing, using Fuji software to translate your RAW image for use in Photoshop, Lightroom, or the like.

http://gadgetwise.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/01/24/old-technology-modernizes…
Old Technology Modernizes a Camera Sensor

Fuji has reached back into film history to tweak a digital light sensor technology that appears in the new $600 Fuji X20 consumer camera.

A camera’s light sensors are made of an array of tinier photo sensors usually set to detect red, green or blue light. Those smaller sensors are most often laid out in an orderly grid pattern called a Bayer array.

That causes a problem. When the orderly array of sensors takes a picture of some equally orderly patterns, say, a houndstooth jacket, or close parallel lines, an irregular wavy shadow or rainbow seems to appear over the image. That is called a moiré pattern.

The Fuji X20
There are a lot of ways to avoid the moiré pattern, but they degrade picture quality, often by making it a little fuzzy. In digital cameras, that is often accomplished with an optical low pass filter, a translucent filter which restricts light.

Old fashioned analog photographs didn’t get a moire pattern because the crystals in film and photo paper aren’t even in size and placement. That randomness breaks up the moire effect.

So Fuji built a new sensor employing what it knew from the film business. Instead of using the Bayer array, it created a pattern called the X-Trans sensor which lays out the red green and blue photo sensors in a way that simulates the randomness of analog film.

That allows Fuji to remove the low pass filter, which – according to Fuji – means higher resolution and less graininess than on photos taken with the the X10, the cameras new X20 replaces.

The X-Trans array sensor had appeared on last year’s X-Pro 1, which lists for $1,400 for the body alone. It is also on this year’s X100S, which lists for $1,300.

There is a trade off though. Photo editing products like Photoshop are made to work on shots taken using Bayer arrays. So you either must shoot JPEG images (not RAW) or add a step to processing, using Fuji software to translate your RAW image for use in Photoshop, Lightroom, or the like.

The X20 does claim other virtues. For one, Fuji says it has the fastest auto focus in its class (we are talking winner by tenths of a second here). Another feature should appeal to people who don’t like digging through menus for camera functions. The user of an X20 accesses a lot of features through knobs and dials mounted on the X20’s rangefinder-style body rather than using screen menus.

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