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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5100
Saturation Setting: The Shocking Truth Revealed!!
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<blockquote data-quote="WhiteLight" data-source="post: 126310" data-attributes="member: 9556"><p>Just like how your camera chooses the optimum setting for converting to JPG, even the software you use would use it's 'mind' to decipher how each image must be converted - which bits of info to take & which bits to throw out.</p><p></p><p>In this process the program notices that the saturation settings are different for each shot, so the numbers used in the processing algorithm would be minutely different which results in a slightly different output.</p><p>A JPG is always a processed image.. either processed by the camera's mind, or your software's mind or your mind while you post process</p><p></p><p>If you'd really like to see if there is a difference in the images captured, you should be looking at or posting the RAW images. </p><p>Which i am certain would be identical.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="WhiteLight, post: 126310, member: 9556"] Just like how your camera chooses the optimum setting for converting to JPG, even the software you use would use it's 'mind' to decipher how each image must be converted - which bits of info to take & which bits to throw out. In this process the program notices that the saturation settings are different for each shot, so the numbers used in the processing algorithm would be minutely different which results in a slightly different output. A JPG is always a processed image.. either processed by the camera's mind, or your software's mind or your mind while you post process If you'd really like to see if there is a difference in the images captured, you should be looking at or posting the RAW images. Which i am certain would be identical. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D5100
Saturation Setting: The Shocking Truth Revealed!!
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