It's difficult to see differences in small images at any megapixel. Big prints, yes.
Please comment briefly on the megapixel horserace as you see it.
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Good film was very high resolution, but good lenses are even better. By rough calculation a 35 mm image was about 35 megapixels. I would like the same in digital. My film scanner is 5000 dpi, that gives 37.5 MP. I want sharp and I want sharp after cropping, so more and better pixels please.
Everything is relative... if I can get medium format resolution in a 35mm size, I would welcome that IF I also had the same light gathering capability & handling versitility. 12MP is fine for 35mm equivalancy in most applications. Not sure that the higher MP buys you more in practical application but I could be proven wrong?
Perhaps the pros need files that big, but for myself, with 11X17" prints about the largest I make - 5X7 or 8x10 most common - more than 12 or 15 mp is really more than I need, and takes up far too much memory in the computer, let alone memory card. I also try to get the best picture I can in camera, so don't need that much in the way of excess bits in files to do a lot of Photoshop digital darkroom work with.
As far as my needs go, 12 megapixels are plenty for most work assignments or personal photo collections. More than that such as will be used in full size sensors required for special work would be extreme overkill. Just think of the computer processing time and storage needed. I think the industry is just pushing to sell the latest and (greatest?) technology. We user would be better served if camera manufacturers just improve what exist now.
Fourth option: So long as the quality of the photo is maintained, I see no reason to limit potential crop options by limiting MP. For those worried about excessive file sizes, I think options like sRAW are good - some peope don't want high MPs, great, let them use sRAW and get all the options they'd have shooting a 10MP camera while giving the rest of us 20MP.
I would think 10 to 15 MP would be more than enough for me now. The only possible upside to large sensors is allowing image crops with less quality loss. The large files requiring extra computer storage and processing I would view as negatives.