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Diffraction limited pixels... Really?
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<blockquote data-quote="Stoshowicz" data-source="post: 363398" data-attributes="member: 31397"><p>Yes , I do want to know the mathematically calculated ideal. Thats exactly it. You could take lots and lots of shots of a brick wall , the number of permutations -possible outcomes is huge. </p><p> If one was going to fire cannon balls then statistically find an experimental center of impact , all the work could have been biased by crosswind. Thats why one calculates the trajectory first , then compares results against the ideal.</p><p>If you fire with no calculation , you are just guessing.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Stoshowicz, post: 363398, member: 31397"] Yes , I do want to know the mathematically calculated ideal. Thats exactly it. You could take lots and lots of shots of a brick wall , the number of permutations -possible outcomes is huge. If one was going to fire cannon balls then statistically find an experimental center of impact , all the work could have been biased by crosswind. Thats why one calculates the trajectory first , then compares results against the ideal. If you fire with no calculation , you are just guessing. [/QUOTE]
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Diffraction limited pixels... Really?
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