Does anyone agree with any Ken Rockwell says about RAW and JPEG?
Link to his page:
RAW vs JPG
If you're new to digital photo and don't have post processing experience then it's fine right now to shoot the camera JPEGs. RAW is serious business for commited and skilled photographers. There's a lot to learn. Other's here have noted the RAW+JPEG option in your camera; if you can afford the storage space no harm keeping the RAWs. You may wish in the future you had them.
As for Ken Rockwell: He's so full of it. I started to read that article:
1. "A big problem in 2008 is that people are shooting raw and not knowing why."
I agree it's a problem for them.
2. "Ha Ha! Photoshop is so good I've seen no need to update from CS2, and not shooting raw, I don't have to."
Clearly a statement from someone lacking in post processing skills.
3. "Saving this raw data is exactly like people who save twenty years of newspapers in piles around their house. They know they might need the information sometime, but it sure gets in the way!"
A third grader would see through this false analogy in a minute.
4. "Image quality is the same in JPG and raw."
Unquestionably and provably false.
5. "If you have to ask then just shoot JPG."
He got one right!
6. "The quality is the same for almost all intents and purposes as raw,...."
Didn't even make it down one screen and hes waffling already. See item 4 above.
7. " (I can see differences if I blow things up to 100% or bigger on my computer, but not in prints.)"
And another waffle -- see item 4 above.
8. "One's preference for JPG or raw depends on what you're trying to do. Each format has no absolute goodness; it's all in how appropriate they are to your particular work at hand. Everyone's needs vary and I just happen to prefer JPG."
Two waffles followed by a retraction -- Ken just prefers JPG.
9. "Raw files are just like raw olives: you need to cook or otherwise process them before you can use them. They also go bad fast if left in the raw state and can keep forever once processed to something like olive oil or JPGs."
!!?? Sufficiently left-field to make you stop right there and move on to profitable use of your time.
10. "The JPG processing in the camera can be better than what you may be able to do later in software from raw."
Never. Just never. It may be better than what Ken can do later.
11. "I, like other photographers, prefer to make my adjustments in-camera and use the JPGs directly."
And here then is the bottom line: The automated software in the camera doesn't do as good a job processing the RAW data as I do. I can take any photo that Ken has ever taken as a JPG and with the RAW data produce a better photo. I can then repair Ken's JPEG and remediate some of the camera errors. Of course if Ken can't do the same he should keep shooting JPEGs.
Joe