Rash Predictions
by Mike Johnston
I'm going to bounce completely off the wall here and muse aloud. I want to make some
very rash, long-term predictions about what cameras of the future will look like.
- First of all, I predict that DSLRs will be an evolutionary dead-end. They may last
another six or seven, or even ten or twelve years, but eventually they will fizzle and go
away. I'm not trying to be controversial; I really believe they will.
- Second, I think sensors will get smaller, not bigger. That is, they will get smaller
than "full-frame," APS-C, and 4/3rds size, although they may not need to be as
small as the tiny 1.1/8" imagers on today's digicams. But they will be closer to
today's 2/3 size (6.6 x 8.8mm) than to "full-frame" 24 x 36mm.
Sony's new 7.1 megapixel chip gives an indication, I believe, of the trend toward the
future. It's just really good, a generational leap over, say, the earliest 2-MP imagers in
cameras such as the Nikon CoolPix 950 at the end of the last century. For a Bayer-array
CCD, it has marvelous, crisp resolution, and very good highlight and shadow detail. It
falls far short of larger sensors in high-ISO performance; but, gradually, the engineers
are going to solve that problem. Smaller sensors will catch up to larger sensors in
high-ISO performance. Since there is a limit on how much sensitivity is really needed for
photography, eventually the smaller and larger sensors will bunch together at a sensible
extreme of high performance.

This is what happens when you ask your younger brother to hold still. ISO 1600.
- Eventually, sensors that record all three colors at the same photosite will become the
norm. I can't guess a timetable on this. But it's just too logical for it not to be one
end result of sensor R&D.
- Good cameras will feature large, bright LCD or VGA displays not unlike the one we see
today on the Epson P-2000 multimedia storage device. They will serve as 2D viewfinders and
will double as picture viewers and even editing screens. Brightness will adjust to ambient
light, and the displays will be able to be used as viewfinders in any kind of lighting
conditions.
Will cameras continue to have eye-level finders, whether optical or virtual? Probably,
because there will be situations in which photographers won't want to use a bright,
glowing 2D display. But how this will end up being implemented is something I won't guess
about (except that it won't be a flipping mirror).
- Separate media cards will go away. Maybe not entirely. But eventually (and I'm guessing
sooner rather than later), multi-gigabyte storage will come built into cameras.
- Even on professional or advanced-amateur interchangeable-lens cameras, the lenses,
scaled to the 1.1/8" or 2/3" sensor size, will be miniature compared to today's
"legacy" 35mm-influenced lenses. (Cheaper consumer cameras will continue to have
fixed zooms, naturally.)
- Cameras will routinely plug directly into printers. Simplified image-processing programs
will be built into either the cameras or the printers, with the camera's display serving
as an editing screen for printing.
So what will this camera of the future look like? I think it will likely be a
rectangular "slab" in shape, sized according to the dictates of the selected
visual display. How will the lenses be attached, whether fixed or interchangeable?
Probably a variety of ways. The most obvious place would be the flat side of the slab
opposite the display, whether the display and the body of the camera are one piece or fold
together and apart like a book, with the hinge along the top edge. Or perhaps the lens
will attach along one of the narrow edges. I could envision variants similar to the
original Nikon split-body cameras, with the optical unit alongside the display, twisting
and perhaps folding forward too.
Agree? Disagree? Have a better idea? Please don't send me email directly, but feel free
to weigh in with your comments below. Keep 'em short'n'sweet'n'to-the-point!
Mike Johnston
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More grumpy stuff, mostly on politics: http://quotidianmeander.blogspot.com.
2005 Mike Johnston