Has Camera Technology Already Passed the Threshold for What Most Photographers Actually Need?

Has Camera Technology Already Passed the Threshold for What Most Photographers Actually Need?

With the plethora of new camera features that manufacturers have rolled out in recent years, it begs the question, “How much more do we actually need?"

In writing for this outlet for the past 7+ years, I’ve gotten to ramble on about an endless number of topics. Some are better than others. One particular truth that became evident early on that might not surprise you at all is that articles about gear, without fail, will attract more clicks than any other topic. That’s not surprising. Everyone, including myself, likes to geek out over new technology. Also, there’s the lingering misconception, which camera manufacturers are in no hurry to dispel, that newer cameras equal better photographs. This is, of course, nonsense. You don’t think the Sistine Chapel is any less of an achievement because it wasn’t made using modern construction equipment and painting processes. So why think that the aesthetic value of photographic art is, in any way, directly tied to what tool was used to create it?

Still, the insatiable hunger for more and more content suggesting gear can change your career persists. And, as someone who writes about the photography and film world, it is part of my gig to write about new toys when they hit the market. So, even though I personally try to avoid gear talk when possible in favor of articles centering on running a successful business or improving your artistic craft, I still find myself writing quite often about the latest and greatest of the new product releases.

Not that I’m complaining, by the way. The cameras being released today, from many different brands, are truly capable of amazing feats that, in years past, we would have thought to be fan fiction. It is really an honor to get to test out new gear, be privy to soon-to-be-released products, and get to relate that information to readers. So I'm hoping, both as a photographer and as a tech writer, that manufacturers continue to up the ante on still photography specs. That can only be a good thing. But today, I'd like to think about things from the perspective of a buyer looking to make the right investments for their business.

An interesting thing has happened in recent years. Both because I am a professional photographer and director, and because I write for Fstoppers, I am quite often asked by people what cameras I would suggest they purchase. Sometimes it’s just a friend looking for a new hobby. Or someone going on vacation looking for something to capture their spouse and kids on the trip. Other times, it’s someone who is just starting their career and is looking for a serious work tool to help them run their business. But, in all these cases, more often than not, I tend to find myself suggesting to the potential buyer to skip the new products altogether and focus on the used market. Is this because I think the newer cameras are worse than the old ones? No. Rather, it is because what seems clear to me is that we have long ago crossed the threshold in camera technology of meeting the basic “needs” of 99% of photographers. And while there are new frontiers that should be explored which I’ll discuss in a moment, we are no longer at a point where an honest photographer can say to themselves that the reason they aren’t maximizing their artistic potential is because the technology isn’t there.

Yes, there are certain features that pertain to specific specialties that help and may even be required for certain types of photography. Take burst rate for example. If you are a sports or wildlife photographer, for instance, the number of frames a camera can shoot per second is an objectively important feature. And, thanks to the merging of still and video due to mirrorless cameras, modern photographers have access to 20 fps, 30 fps, or even 40 fps to make sure they capture every fleeting moment. Of course, on a personal level, I do always wonder at what frame rate we go from capturing the decisive moment as a photographer to just essentially shooting video and pulling the perfect frame in post. I’m not saying there’s anything wrong with shooting as fast as your camera can go. It is objectively the correct decision to fulfill the brief. But it does make me wonder if we’ve already reached the point where most cameras on the market in the last five years are already plenty fast enough for nearly everyone. Even at 20 fps, you are pretty much shooting video. Not quite, but almost. So, in the future, if camera manufacturers just keep adding more and more frames per second, while it would be nice, would that really qualify as a need? Are there really that many circumstances that exist that can’t be captured in a still frame when you take 20, 30, 40 of them per second?

Same with megapixels. Again, I love megapixels just as much as the next guy. I’ve owned cameras with as much as 100 MP and can objectively say there is a difference in the files themselves. With that being said, do 99% of photographers actually need that many megapixels? There’s an argument to be made that most photographers don’t even need 45 MPs. This is not a critique of the photographer's artistic merit or an effort to pretentiously say that only “real photographers” need high megapixels. Rather, what I’m saying, and it can’t be said enough, is that more megapixels do not equal a better photograph. It equals a more highly defined photograph. It’s a photograph that can be cropped more and printed larger. But it is not inherently a better work of art than something shot on a 12 MP sensor fifteen years ago. Even if one were to make the argument that “pros need more megapixels,” which may or may not be true depending on the type of professional in question, the world at large is shifting more and more digital. Your final image will be viewed far more times on a digital device than it will likely be viewed in print. Even if you are creating an ad campaign for a major brand, there’s been a decisive shift towards digital usage versus out-of-home. That’s not to say that those gigs don’t still exist. Rather, there are just less of them and more of the bread-and-butter assignments are focusing on digital platforms where a high megapixel image is of less utility. So while you may still want to rent a high megapixel beast for certain assignments, it is fair to say that the vast majority of those in the market for a new camera can easily fulfill 99% of the assignments they will be offered using existing tech.

Those are just examples. And, no doubt, there are a litany of use cases that would refute everything I’ve just said. But, I think you’ll get my point. While the new cameras being announced industry-wide for photographers are objectively awesome, for the most part, I feel like we’ve crossed over the line where all of our needs are now well taken care of. And many of the new improvements are more or less of marginal benefit rather than things we can classify as absolute necessities. Going back to my constant suggestion that most any new photographer should look at the used market first, primarily to save money and get more value for their buck, we’ve had what we need to create beautiful images for over a decade now. Newer updates try to add value by addressing some creature comforts, which may or may not be important to your own workflow, that help sell cameras but are hard for me to use as a basis for a hard recommendation for photographers looking to get the most out of their money.

Which is not to say those improvements are a negative. Nor is it to say there is no room for improvement. For instance, I think the number one thing camera manufacturers should focus on improving in years to come is dynamic range. Dynamic range, give or take a stop, has lingered in the same relative area on cameras for years. There have been improvements, but developments haven’t been as rapid as in areas like burst rate, for example. Especially since dynamic range is something equally important to still photographers and cinematographers, I’d love to see camera manufacturers pour their hearts and souls into that side of the tech. Dynamic range is pretty darn good now, but it’s one area that can always get better. And, from a cynical point of view, dynamic range, like megapixels, is the type of thing that can be marketed with an easily understandable numeric value. So, manufacturers, if you’re reading this, think of the possibilities for all those new sales.

I would also like to see the advancements continue in the realm of flash sync speed. As someone who uses flash quite a bit, I’ll admit that I do actually get excited whenever a new camera is announced that can sync past 1/200th of a second (without High Speed Sync). I have yet to upgrade my camera specifically for this reason. But I do truly lust after fast sync speed that can eliminate the sun to my heart's desire.

Somewhat related to that, I’m interested to see where global shutters can go in the years to come. More an issue for video shooters than still shooters in terms of dealing with rolling shutter artifacts, moving to global shutter systems could have actual practical effects on still photographers as well. Oddly, this could affect both my earlier requests. Global shutters should, in theory, make flash sync speed a thing of the past. But, from things I’ve read (but have not tested personally), global shutters can also have a negative impact on dynamic range. I can’t tell you exactly why. But that is definitely a wrinkle that still needs to be worked out.

Now, I would like to acknowledge two things. One, I am a working professional photographer who uses his camera as a tool to run a business. So I judge a camera's value based on how much it costs versus how many benefits it can give me that will actually affect my end result and productivity. It is not just whether a camera has objectively better specs, but also whether those specs are worth the added expense associated with buying it versus a previous model. So, if we’re talking practicality, there is nothing a modern camera can give me that my older Nikon D850 DSLR wasn’t already giving me seven years ago. Yes, with mirrorless, I now have edge-to-edge focusing capabilities, facial recognition, faster burst rates, and video. But, if I’m being honest with myself, the improvements I’ve made as a photographer in the last seven years have less to do with switching from DSLR to digital and far more to do with pushing myself creatively and working to improve my craft. Something I could have done just as easily with the D850. The main reason for moving to mirrorless and the benefits that have proven objectively meaningful have come on the video side. And, I think that if you are a video shooter, there are still valuable improvements happening in that world which may be worth an upgrade. But, when it comes to stills, I feel like the tech is already out there. It may be the right decision to upgrade to the latest and greatest if it makes a tangible difference to your end product. But, remember, when it comes to creating the Sistine Chapel, the painter matters far more than the paintbrush.

Christopher Malcolm's picture

Christopher Malcolm is a Los Angeles-based lifestyle, fitness, and advertising photographer, director, and cinematographer shooting for clients such as Nike, lululemon, ASICS, and Verizon.

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79 Comments

The threshold for most photographers was passed a decade ago, if not more.

Possibly for you but not the world. You can’t speak for most! All you can speak for is you. It’s amazing how people such as yourself shrink the world down to your own very narrow limited experience of one and then use that to make global judgements.

You are correct, Eric... I should probably not express my opinion in a manner which appears to be speaking in behalf of other people. Let me rephrase that comment by saying it's my opinion from what I see, read, and hear, that the majority of people who have something to say about the subject do not claim to really "need" additional technology improvements. I haven't heard anyone say that their photography was going to tank if they did not get that new updated whatever. At best there are a few minor features on the wish list of a few photographers. At best, new technology makes a task easier, but in my opinion, nothing which anyone actually "needs" to produce a high quality level of work.

If not speaking FOR other people, I'll speak TO them...

If someone thinks they always need the latest new camera feature to become a better photographer, they are misguided in their thinking. A very few professionals have unique needs, but most people do not. Most people just need to practice more and shoot more with what they have. I still uphold the belief that any camera made within the last ten years is fully capable of making great photographs, even by today's standards. Photography is actually hard work... too many people seem to think new camera features circumvent that process. Remember this universal truth when tempted to pull out your credit card:

GREAT PHOTOGRAPHS ARE CONCEIVED IN THE MIND, NOT THE CAMERA GEAR.

"Has Camera Technology Already Passed the Threshold for What Most Photographers Actually Need?" That's the title to this article. Here are a few direct answers to that question extracted from the comments below which appear to support my opinion:

"what most photographers think they need is new toys to show off...."
"Can’t believe that I actually made a good deal of money with [old gear]"
"In some aspects, it has."
"Current cameras still won't pay for my beer."
"we passed that mark a long time ago"
"Yes, of course. And mostly the technology is not doing anything to improve the actual photos."
"There is no need, there's only want. Need is subjective. Want is limitless."
"Yup many years ago."
"Yes, they passed the threshold long ago."
"It did in the early 2000s. By 2010, what 'most' people actually needed was affordable by all."
"For human viewing, I would say yes."
"In so many ways I kind of agree..."

So is it fair to conclude that the opinions of most people writing in this thread support my initial comment? If not, we're either reading something differently, or hung up on the definition of the word "most."

One last thing... this is not the first time this subject has been raised for discussion, so I think it's reasonable to draw a few conclusions about what a lot of other people think, when a lot of other people have already said the same things previously.

Photography is wide and varied as are photographers. You could read as many articles as you wish on photography and still only have an opinion based on what one person thinks. That person being you. This argument about technology having peaked is an old one used for more products than just cameras. The problem is you have zero knowledge on what might be just around the corner that may change photography for good. Who back in June of 2007 would have guessed that the iPhone would change the concept of photography for billions of users and end up giving most people a camera in their pocket . Who saw that coming? Did you? Technology has the habit of surprising people straight out of left field and presenting new opportunities and new ways of doing things. For some people who are happy with the slap of a mirror an old 5D or the like will still do it for them. For many others that’s certainly not the case. I could not shoot in the way I do not get the shots I do with an outdated camera like a 5D. But that’s me. Photographers and their needs are as varied as leaves on a tree. Try shooting birds in flight or twitchy butterflies with an old 5D vs a more modern camera with its superior AF and fps. capability and see how you get on. Never mind higher resolution, better low light capabilities, higher dynamic range etc. Some photographers will always want the most advanced gear they can get their hands on. It all depends on what kind of photographer you are. People who shoot on film are most likely happy with 1970 technology, but that’s just them and not all photographers. It’s the same with those happy with current technology. That again is just them. There is still plenty of scope for improvements in camera technology that many photographers will happily snap up if it improves their chances of getting the shot. It’s not possibly the case of getting a better shot but being offered a better chance of just getting it. The initial question is a silly one that totally misunderstands how technology evolves. Just ask yourself why people no longer use box brownies and why most people shoot digital? Do you still use Windows 95? If not why not or how about ask Jeeves and Internet Explorer?

Thank you for taking the time to respond, Eric, and you make an interesting comment: “The initial question is a silly one that totally misunderstands how technology evolves.”

I don’t think the premise for the question of this article is silly at all. Just because we’ve evolved from living in caves to living in large insulated homes doesn’t mean that evolution will proceed into the future at that same rate as it has in the past, or with the same benefits. I think nearly all industries are facing resistance as it pertains to the development of new products. Maybe it’s time to ask why. Apple appears almost desperate to develop that next new life-changing product, but it doesn’t seem to be working. In fact, that’s been the underlying strategy for success at Apple from the beginning: sell us something that we never knew beforehand that we actually needed. That's a formidable challenge though. Could the Apple Vision Pro come to the rescue of Apple’s mid-life crisis, perhaps? How’s that working out? We're not exactly seeing a stampede of customers lining up to buy that product. In fact, Apple has developed nothing of significance since the iPhone. That’s why camera companies are pushing so hard to convince you that you can’t live without 30 frames per second, or one type of shutter or another… there’s nothing else in the way of improvements of significant value.

Naturally any discussion of future technology will focus on AI, and therein lies the existential issues such as the meaning of life. For people here who have expressed the disappointment of not getting the perfectly exposed picture while on vacation, there’s hope that AI can fix the lighting or any other self-inflicted problem. Why bother making the effort of mastering your photography skills when the computer can easily fix everything? Technological innovation is usually focused on speed, ease and convenience… often a replacement for thinking skills or mastery of one’s craft. Those sort of things are historically achieved from time, work and effort, for which the masses would rather not endure. Why bother to learn math or language fundamentals when the computer can do it all for you? Doesn’t that concern you in the slightest? AI replacing our jobs? I’m sure the average worker can hardly wait for that notice saying he’s been replaced by a machine. Rumor has it that Apple is all-in on AI research and development. Adobe turned from a darling to a villain almost overnight when they threw the same photographers who they’d been serving for 30 years under the bus by using their images for AI development. No, I tend to think that technology is facing new barriers to acceptance that have never been quite so strong before. Technology surely has the capacity to change everything, but change for the better? I guess that’s what you’re saying – for some people it will be for the better; other people will see it as the ruin of civilization.

I would not assume that because of past history, that the world is clamoring for the next great innovation. In many ways the world as I see it is tiring of the next new thing. Many people, myself included, would prefer a simpler, less complicated life, not so entirely dependent on electronic devices. Something more tangible to hold. Young and old alike are beginning to appreciate that concept, even kids so young that they never experienced life before cellphones. People are starting to recognize the drawbacks of “alway’s connected” technology. Employees can never get away from their jobs. Kids can never disconnect from the expectations of social media. Up to our eyeballs in anxiety. People are skeptical of losing control of themselves to technology. Anyway, the next few decades should be interesting. I may not be around as a witness, or maybe medical innovation and driverless cars will allow me to live an uninhibited lifestyle at age 100. As you say, one never knows what’s coming down the road. But I won’t feel disappointed if I can’t shoot 20 frames per second. Are the Kodak Instamatic photographs of my youth in the 1960s as sharp or colorful as the photos captured by an iPhone? No, but they’re just as meaningful to me, and arguably more important, I can put a finger on them quickly. Folks will be lucky if they can even find their childhood pictures when they get to be my age. I can hear it now: “Now where did I put those floppy discs?”

Evolution just happens and had been happening for almost 4bn years. It’s the same with technology. It’s not something any single person is in control of, it just happens. Its direction and its outcomes? Who can tell. We will just have to wait and see.

If manufacturers and professional reviewers answered the question honestly, "what most photographers actually need" is to spend more money to support them. Of course, what most photographers think they need is new toys to show off to friends and other photographers.

On the other hand, when Ansel Adams made "Moonrise, Hernandez" eighty-some years ago, he had to stop his International Travelall and set up his 8x10 on its roof. Today he could just hold his iPhone out the window and not even slow down. Now that's progress!

And how do you think that IPhone image would hold up to Ansel's image printed at say, 4 by 5 feet?

For someone interested in image quality, no. For someone taking a selfie in front of it with their own iPhone, yes. And that's 98% of today's audience. Don't think of Ansel Adams as an artist or photographer. Get with the times and think of him as an influencer.

"This comment literally made me throw up in my mouth..." Darn, I was hoping for a spit-take on your keyboard or iPhone. Oh well...

But "influencer" does not literally mean "creating stuff". That would be a "content creator". The etymology of "influencer" goes back to the 1600s, and refers to someone who has an influence on others around them. Adams' importance in the art world is arguably not in his imagery, but in the influence his style of photography had on other photographers, many of whom still imitate him today. (How many articles have you seen with variations of "Make Digital Photographs Like Ansel Adams!"?)

Adams work had relatively little influence outside his small circle until he signed with a marketing agent late in his career. Vivian Maier had no influence at all until her work was publicized after her death. The importance of any artist, what insures them a place in art history, is not their work. It's the influence their work has on others.

Yes, "influencer" has become a hipster term. But at least I didn't say "bomb-diggity fer shizzle..."

Sounds like revisionist history.

I don't think the term "influencer" was used in the Ansel Adams days.

I have one of his prints. It's an absolute work of art that would be hard to get directly out of a camera these days. It would take considerable post-processing — which is what AA did with his "raw" images!

The Oxford English Dictionary dates the term "influencer" to at least 1664.

https://www.oed.com/dictionary/influencer_n

BTW, Adams did a lot of work in Polaroid, even writing a book on Polaroid photography. It doesn't get much more "directly out of a camera" than that!

https://www.amazon.com/Polaroid-Land-photography-Ansel-Adams/dp/0821207296

I can replicate and picture

For you to say that "Adams work had relatively little influence outside his small circle until he signed with a marketing agent late in his career" discredits the significant amount of influence which he did, in fact, have in photography long before late in his career. I honestly can't see where you got that idea from. Keep in mind that he was born in San Francisco in 1902.

Adams' work was a major influence in photographic style and technique:

He was commissioned in 1935 to create a book about photographic technique by a publisher in London. The book, "Making a Photograph" was a huge success leading to a second edition in 1939.

Adams influenced the perception of photography as a fine art:

Ansel Adams photographs were included in the first photography exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art in New York in 1937. He was given the position of vice-chairman (advisor) for the newly created Department of Photography at the New York Museum of Modern Art in 1940 at the age of 38, working under Beaumont Newhall. Before that point in time, photography was given little credit as an art form. His relationship with Newhalls did not just fall out of the sky. Adams had been cultivating that professional relationship with the east coast, including Stieglitz, for several years. His influence extended far beyond the small circle of Group F.64 photographers, which you may be alluding to.

"Unlike the irascible and intransigent Stieglitz, Adams was eager to be part of the museum. Such an association would not only help him influence the direction of photography as a fine art but would also clearly be of significant benefit to his career." (Ansel Adams and the American Landscape, Jonathan Spaulding).

Adams influenced government legislation for land conservation:

He traveled from his home in California to Washington DC in 1936 to lobby for the creation of Kings Canyon National Park. In the process, one of his prints was purchased by the Secretary of the Interior, Harold Ickes, who placed the photograph in his office.

"Recently we transmitted to Secretary Ickes the complimentary copy of your new Sierra Nevada portfolio which you sent to the National Park Service. Yesterday the Secretary took it to the White House and showed it to President Roosevelt, who was so impressed with it that the Secretary gave it to him." (Ansel Adams and the American Landscape, Jonathan Spaulding).

All of that by age 40 and you think he had little influence until some marketing agent got a hold of him? With all due respect, Adams hustled and earned his fame and money virtually entirely on his own, and accomplished great things at a relatively young age.

Carleton Watkins' mammoth plates of Yosemite were responsible for Yosemite being declared the first National Park, and helped found the environmental movement in the United States, yet he lived and died in poverty and his largest influence in photography was arguably on Ansel Adams.

Adams spent his early career scraping by doing commercial gigs and guiding Sierra Club tours of Yosemite to make ends meet. I'm not saying he has no influence or his images aren't important. I'm just noting that financial success, influence, and wide recognition came relatively late in his life.

We could also argue about Beaumont Newhall's influence in promoting his close friend Adams late in Adams' career, giving him that first-ever photography exhibit at the Museum of Modern Art, and praising him lavishly in his "History of Photography", which was the standard text in all photo-history classes for decades and influenced all following photo-history texts. Meanwhile, Newhall all but exorcised William Mortensen from photography's history, even though Mortensen was a better known art photographer than Adams in the early twentieth century.

But this is the internet, and that's what we do, argue...

"Get with the times..." Hmmmm... I think I'd rather not. I have this nagging feeling that everything outside my front door feels, so.... artificial.

Christopher, what you say about the painter and inference that it's the mind and vision that counts is so true. I've just finished an ebook, no cost, no catches, that deals with topics "Behind The Seen" aka the psychology of imagery, that you are welcome to have a look at. It's definitely free, just all my lectures etc rewritten and compiled into one document before my mind turns completely to mush, oops too late. It's 333 pages with 300 images contributed by 24 noted photographers.There is an explanation, examples and download at https://sites.google.com/view/behindtheseen
I'd love to know what you think.

Can’t believe that I actually made a good deal of money with a couple of RB-67’s and a Gossen Luna Pro……

I’d like to see HDR stacking stop-gap solved. One shot 18EV. Now that we have global shutter sensors on the market, flash sync speed is solved. Lastly, these companies can get to work reducing the cost of the damn lenses and bodies. $2000 per lens for pro work? That’s 14 65” TVs.

Cool! So all I have to do is get 14 Costco shoppers together, and I don't need 60+ years of photography experience!

I used to do graphic design, back when "paste up" actually meant gluing text blocks and photographs on a master sheet. I started out with Mergenthaler typesetting.

Then, the Apple Mac and LaserWriter arrived, and suddenly, *everyone* was a graphic designer!

The same has happened to photography. All you really *need* is an iPhone.

But that isn't what makes photography fun, is it? I want real buttons and a real viewfinder.

I still go out with a Super Technika and Velvia 50 10x12cm film now and then… just to remember what real photography is.

Christopher Malcolm asked,

"Has Camera Technology Already Passed the Threshold for What Most Photographers Actually Need?"

In some aspects, it has.

But there are still things that many of us want or need cameras to do that they can not do yet.

Like what?

One huge technological advancement would be absolute exposure control .....

An exposure mode that will detect blown highlights in real time and adjust the exposure to make it so that no highlights are blown. Or we can tell the camera how many blown pixels are acceptable and then it will expose to precisely the threshold that we stipulate. Like if we say that it can blow 2 percent of the total pixels, then it will do precisely that. If we say that it can blow no more than three adjacent pixels, then it will do exactly that. If we san that the brightest pixel in the image is to be 2/3 of a stop below the blown out point, then it will do exactly that.

We set very precise parameters, and then the processors in the camera adjust the exposure to give us precisely the results that we tell it to. Like if we do a 50 shot RAW burst while waving the camera all around wildly, every single frame in that burst will be exposed exactly as we instructed, regardless of how much the scene and light levels change as we wave the camera around whilst bursting.

My Sony a9 and a7iii has something like that in the metering. The "Highlight" option tries to protect the highlights. I don't use it because it has the tendency to under expose the subject way too much in favor of saving something insignificant like a bright light bulb, window light, metallic/reflective surface, boring white sky, etc.

Though, in the same line of thought as yours, I wouldn't mind an Auto-ETTR.

Blown highlights! use the EV +/- in the Neg direction to the norm -3 but the A7RM5 has a -5 on the dial but inside even the -3 limit you can go more on most camera.

Well of course we can avoid blown highlights with the gear we have. But we have to take a second or three to think about it, and to adjust a setting. That is a second or so that we then do not have to reposition ourselves, or to reframe or recompose or zoom out or in a wee bit. A camera that did exposure for us instantly and precisely, re-adjusting itself every millisecond, would be better than what we currently have.

With all due respect, and without intending to belittle anyone, this—like many other claims—is largely a matter of skill. Consider fashion photography: look at the work of Peter Lindbergh and Helmut Newton. For landscape and nature, just flip through National Geographic magazines from the 1980s. For documentary photography, take a look at Life magazines. As for sports photography, think about how Olympic photographers managed to capture incredible shots before autofocus technology existed. Sure, modern technology can make things easier, but as history shows, a strong skillset will always yield great results.

I often do flip through National Geographic issues from the 1980s and 1990s ..... and I am struck by how poor most of the wildlife photography is. Most of it is not only sub-par from a technical standpoint, but is also rather boring from the standpoint of action or behavior.

Also, the goal for many is not to get "a great shot", but rather to get as many great shots as possible. What you see are the images that were caotured with less advanced gear. What you do not see are the thousands and thousands of great images that were not captured because the old gear simply did not allow them to be captured.

"But there are still things that many of us want or need cameras to do that they can not do yet."

Agreed. Current cameras still won't pay for my beer.

Well, Ummm, IMHO we passed that mark a long time ago, yet some photographers still think we need more bells and whistles in cameras today. I mean, exactly how many different iterations of a camera do we really need? Just look at all the "reviews" out there now on the various brands and apparently there is still no "perfect" camera.

What we actually need is a camera that can do 100% of the technical things for us, perfectly and instantly, 100%of the time. I mean things like exposure, focusing, image stabilizing, and microtiming. If the camera does 100% of this for me, then my brain is free to concentrate entirely on camera position, subject behavior, framing, and composition.

I think what has happened is the last 15 years is the difference between the top end cameras and entry level has significantly shrunk. With mirrorless there has been some innovation but most changes in the last 5 years have be small increments that probably made little difference to most images, probably increasing someone's hit rate and probably capturing a lot more images.

Photo camera outdated silicon sensors are not sensitive enough, they require bulky and heavy lenses. Technological stagnation is bad. That's why I hope to new generation graphene and quantum dot enhanced CMOS sensors which are x1000 more times sensitive and can detect even deep MWIR spectrum. Metalenses are needed too. I wish to have A7s sensitivity in phone size.

"Has Camera Technology Already Passed the Threshold for What Most Photographers Actually Need?" Yes, of course. And mostly the technology is not doing anything to improve the actual photos.

These discussions regarding technological advancement always fascinate me. While this subject typically circles around every so often, I keep getting older and my perspective continuously changes. Having recently celebrated a 70th birthday, I often reflect on technology changes over the course of my lifetime, and come to imagine that not much is really all that dramatically different from the day I was born. I think back when my family bought a color television for the first time, seeing the NBC Peacock unfold in “living” color. But you know what my favorite TV programs are now? TCM Classic movies from the 1930s in, of course, black and white.

The invention of cellphones and the microwave oven might arguably be considered having had the most wide-ranging impact on people’s lives during my lifetime. But we spoke by telephone and cooked with an oven before those things came along. After the last of our microwave ovens broke, we never bothered replacing it. The cellphone attached to everyone’s ear, no matter the time or place, might be argued for being as much of a curse as it is a blessing. Consider the changes though during my grandfather’s lifetime from 1892 to 1951. There was no indoor electricity for cooking when he was born… at least not commonly found in many households. No indoor plumbing either. No radio or television. No telephone. No cars or airplanes. Neither of my parents likely had incandescent light bulbs (the main source of indoor electric light) in their homes when they were born. Now we have Alexa turning them on and off for us. Are we better off?

And while I’m not at the point of wanting to exchange my digital camera for film and darkroom supplies, my photography is progressively evolving from hyper-saturated color to the elegance and timeless qualities of black and white. My favorite images are still some of Ansel Adams' prints. And my camera of choice is the same as it was ten years ago… the Nikon D800E. I was told by a world-class lifestyle photographer whom I knew then, that it would be the last camera I’d ever need to buy in my lifetime. That could either be a reflection of the technology or my age… not sure which. But you probably won’t be surprised by me saying that I’m not exactly waiting on the edge of my seat for the next big thing to roll along.

Now I'm as much of a pixel-peeper as anyone, and my goal with a photo is to render fine detail and texture, but in today's clinical process of seeking the perfect picture, we often lose sight of the raw emotion which the art of photography is founded upon. So, yes, technology is long past the stage of what is needed. What is needed is more heart and soul in photography.

There is no need, there's only want. Need is subjective. Want is limitless. We are currently at a point where most people could not distinguish between photos taken with a good, but older camera and the latest and greatest camera. And even if they could the camera used would the least of the factors insofar as which photograph they like the best.

Yup many years ago.

My cameras are 10-16 years old. Newest being the 5DsR and 5D4.

Can't see me upgrading these bodies as they do all I need.

Yes, they passed the threshold long ago. Who genuinely needs 40fps...?

Excellent article Christopher, articulating what at lot of us are feeling.
Agree with you about dynamic range too. Why do my wife's iPhone snaps have better dynamic range than my very expensive camera ?

Sorry to say so: The dynamic range of the sensor of an iphone cannot match the dynamic range of an APS-C or Full Frame sensor. That's Physically seen impossible.
Thru processing Apple creates the impression it's as good as, and even in the background they may be using AI to create the image you want. A lot of even high end camera use more or less tricks to make images better. But we still only get 10-12EV no matter what the numbers in the tech specs say. And do i want 18EV - yes i want 18 EV, but not at a price, and not with a lot of extra weight.
More and more will images be generated thru AI, and it won't be 100% pure sensor-captured shots anymore, this will start with smartphones and it'll move up.
There's one juridical issue with AI - you loose the protection by law, due to the fact AI-images cannot be copyrighted. So i doubt that images that are half-generated by AI in a smartphone are still legally protected.

When Sony came out with the first A7 models 1 and 2 there was a section on the menu scale for on camera apps that not only had a Digital Filter app that covered Three sections of the frame that also processed in camera with out put in jpeg or raw or both and the lines of separation of each were adjustable before sending to the SD card. Many other apps like star trial, toys, timelapse, angle shift, sync to smart phone, motion shot (getting a person images in multilabel places in the frame [no need for Ps]), lens correction, and many more that required external devices to do the same. But no longer available for buying and downloads go away for those who did buy in 2025.
Did we then go way ahead of what a camera can do to today with more options on buttons and now carrying a lot of filters and other toys.
just ask if a used camera with all those apps would help a new photographer know how to operate a external toy need later on.
The apps 90% of Reps and users never knew about but why not keep the available for the used cameras that beginner's will cut their teeth on for cameras are forever.
#1 and #2 used the Digital Filter.

It did in the early 2000s. By 2010, what "most" people actually needed was affordable by all. But photography, except for a niche of professional photographers, is a luxury. An article about what people "need" misses the point.

For human viewing, I would say yes. We can't—and don't need to—improve our vision. For technical and scientific photography, maybe. Better resolution, more accurate color, less coma and chromatic aberration.

Easy to show me a photo I like. Show me a photo that can switch settings at the speed of thought. Now show me a photo I care about.

IMO the moment demand ceases is the moment we’ve reached the point where the tech can mimic the (dynamic) range of the human eye or replace what brought us to a place or time.

As someone whose first SLR was a used Mamiya 1000 DTL with stop down metering and screw mount lenses, I am amazed at how primitive it all seems now. Yet somehow, with all the limitations, we still managed to produce some pretty stunning images. If you can't produce a satisfying image with a newer feature ladened mirrorless digital camera, it's time to find a different hobby/business. What perplexes me to this day is the lack of a digital viewer that allows both image orientations to be displayed in the same size. All of the emphasis seems to be on improving image capture, yet none of the current displays can match the image size consistency that analog photographers grew to expect of their prints and slides. A more pleasing photo viewer would be symmetrical, so that both image orientations could fit equally in either direction. Current asymmetrical displays are the equivalent of watching an analog slideshow with a screen that is not fully opened. Any shape/aspect ratio other than a 1:1 square will always compromise the image size of one image orientation. The only thing preventing the creation of a unique photo device, with all of the editing storing and sharing features found on a typical tablet, is the shape of the display. The ability to view slideshows of same-sized, edge-to-edge images or same-sized thumbnails placed in various grid arrangements would be a game changer for photographers.

As an Olympus / OM System user I am quite spoiled with superb image stabilization, four seconds free hand exposures work nicely nearly all the time, but if they were to make it eight, I’d take it happily 😀

I've done 120+ seconds from the deck of a moving boat with the OM-4t. It had excellent IBIS: "In Brain Image Stabilization." Those days, you had to really think your way through long exposures. I kept both eyes open, and rocked back and forth with the waves, keeping the moon in exactly the same spot with my non-viewfinder eye.

Joking aside, I have found that Olympus/OMDS has the very best IBIS you can get. In many ways, it brings back the problems I had with the old OM-2 and OM-4 — with their outstanding, long exposure control, I tended to shoot slower than I should have. :-)

"four seconds free hand exposures work nicely nearly all the time, but if they were to make it eight, I’d take it happily"

Here's an eight-second, hand-held exposure!

This used the OM-1's IBIS aid. For those who haven't seen it, it's brilliant. There's a box in the viewfinder with a dot in the middle. Your job is to keep the dot within the box by carefully not moving the camera in the X-Y axes. Outside that box is another box with two bars on the side that grow and shrink as you rotate the camera. Your job is to keep those bars as small as possible by not rotating the camera.

But back to first principles: reproduction ratio. You're not going to get a chance to use this IBIS aid on a 600mm super-telephoto or on a 1:1 macro!

This image was shot with the superb M.Zuiko 8mm ƒ/1.8 fisheye, which is an optimal lens for hand-held shooting. With the help of the IBIS aid and this lens, I am convinced that I could hand-hold that sucker until I get cramps in my arms or have to pee.

In so many ways I kind of agree for the simple fact that in my lifetime of shooting photography and video I actually end up pulling out a clean video with at least five autofocus points and that was 11 years ago. There was no c log there was no ProRes raw none of this existed. I had got five frames per second. Now I can get 135 frames per second. Did I upgrade to mirrorless nah that's not my type of height I just upgraded to the 90 d after playing with the 80D and seeing how special it was and how capable it was able to perform well the 90D was only necessary to purchase. It wasn't about the image quality or shooting 4K because I am a news journalist. Images about seeing if I could include improve my quality of image and it worked it actually worked now I wouldn't take nothing away from that 80D. Because practically is still in my bag. With 24.2 megapixels and some good glass will make this camera still rock. If I actually showed you the video that I shot 11 years ago you would be surprised but you also look at the video quality in your understand the difference between today and 11 years ago. They say I might fall behind because I haven't went to mirrorless but if you check out the market they haven't even fully found a real reason to use a mirrorless camera right now That's why they came out with the r the R5 Mark II because now they understanding the mission the objective the goal first day was just pushing stuff off here's the R5 here's the R6 the r10 they was just running them off to try and keep up but when they sit down and actually focused on it they made a better one. And that's been like all my life of buying cameras even when I buy one they'll make another one
And then when they make another one the other one is better than the one that you just bought. So in this case it'll never be a end in chasing the right camera. Right now I got the right camera if it's great in my hands I rock with two batteries and it really doesn't die I can shoot 4K video uncropped it runs hot but it doesn't run hot to where it's going to stop. Pulling 4K from my 90D a little trick to it, is definitely not as fast as pulling 1080p. But at the end of the day who really has a 6K TV a 8K TV a 4K TV who really has these things I don't have one I don't have one never thought to afford one. ProRes Raw and c log are not a factor in my day The news don't require me to shoot and see log or ProRes raw and it doesn't require me to shoot in 4K I just do it. As I just wasn't interesting topic and I see a lot of backlash that he got from it maybe because he was a color person but he does have a point and I don't like the comments because they very disrespectful he wasn't saying that this was for everybody he was just saying that this was his perspective you can't ridicule people about their perspective and how they think about cameras and how they feel about cameras one guy said he'll never buy a Canon camera because they don't change the look of them. I didn't jump on him and tell him who cares only thing I said is I like to economic design of my Canon camera because it feels good in my hand and it doesn't feel like a toy. Most cameras do feel like a toy especially those mirrorless cameras you put a heavy lens on them and they're not even going to balance themselves

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