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these higher ISO settings, as he said, allow you to shoot at high ISO settings at f/stops that give useful, workable depth of field on a full-frame camera.
Too high native ISO is a very bad thing. You can boost ISO but if you reduce ISO you will hurt quality a lot more. I don't think you can reduce ISO by more than 2 stops without seriously hurt quality.
??? I'd rather have 102,400 ISO native than extended.
your statement is very confusing, you're saying too high is bad, then talk about low ISO.
Too high native ISO is a very bad thing. You can boost ISO but if you reduce ISO you will hurt quality a lot more. I don't think you can reduce ISO by more than 2 stops without seriously hurt quality.
??? I'd rather have 102,400 ISO native than extended.
your statement is very confusing, you're saying too high is bad, then talk about low ISO.
Native ISO should be around ISO100 or 200 to be useful. With high native ISO you can only shoot at high ISO and can not lower the ISO. Most camera can only lower the ISO 1 stop below native before quality is becoming a problem. If you have native ISO of 400,000 do you shoot at 400,000 all the time? I don't think even most of time.
There is only one single native ISO rating for any given sensor.
A native ISO is an ISO the sensor gives you without any digital trickery after the deal. There are only very few sensors without an amplifier before the A/D converter.There is only one single native ISO rating for any given sensor.
No such thing.This would have to be a major leap for a native ISO of 102,400 (if it's just as good as the rated 12800 on the D4s, D750, DF). Basically 3 stops of performance over the best performing Nikon full frame DSLR's currently. That would be nuts.