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Post by davy on Jun 4, 2016 7:24:59 GMT
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Post by Dragon Man on Jun 4, 2016 13:43:10 GMT
I see that Forum is full of the usual negative posts.
Why can't people wait and see how a new product functions in real use before spouting off and being Keyboard experts. One clown with his all-wonderful sensor knowledge states categorically that the camera can't use a 1" sensor because the body is too small. Well, he is wrong on 2 counts.
1. The Tiny1 staff corrects him and says that the camera can take a 1" sensor, if someone would ever want one. Isn't it comforting knowing that someone who has never seen the camera can determine its maximum sensor size! He must be a Wizard LOL!
2. For Astro work a 1" sensor is useless anyway! Imagine the amount of Coma and Vignetting! and the size of optics needed to use a 1" sensor.
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Post by davy on Jun 4, 2016 14:12:30 GMT
Totally agree ken,this is one of these rare occasions that someone has thought out of the box on an astronomy camera and it gets slated,thing is the information is out there and if you listen to the first video,you here things like,zwo chip being used,,mmm to me that perked my ears up,dark frames being created when charging,very clever,,changing parts for cooler running ones,,come on all the video experts in astronomy,,,who would have thought out some of those features,,,google sky maps incorporated ,,well for one I use google sky map as a rough guide to whats out there.dont get me wrong the proof is in the pudding,what I have found software is getting easier to use with the newer cameras,,who wants ultra high tech if it takes a nasa genius to work it.. Pity we dont have one to test as yet,,ive already got ideas for the tiny2.
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Post by howie1 on Jun 5, 2016 2:25:34 GMT
LOL. Yup, love the armchair experts. Not. Whats that saying ... "A little bit of knowledge can be a dangerous thing!". Got involved with a couple a short time ago on stacking effects. Must admit because of the constant posts putting up their armchair experts views I totally believed what they said ... until I got a book which said different, then did some proper research and found the authors of a few stacking programs also said different, as did a Nikon white paper on their internal NR (which stacks), as did a Uni paper using stacking for microscopy work, as did Jerry Lodriguez (published astrophotograher with 20 years experience) at which point I thought ... Hmmm, believe the published guys/acknowledged experts all saying different things to the armchair guys, or believe the constant posting of what seems to be incorrect info of the armchair guys? Without out of the box thinking we'd all be still practising visual astronomy. So yeah, I'd love to test a TinyMOS ... hint, hint.
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Post by davy on Jun 5, 2016 8:42:20 GMT
Im in contact with ashprit via emails and he will be coming on the forum at some stage to answer questions onthe tinymos tiny1 camera,I have put up as much info as I can for now on the product,, hint taken on testing,,im shure there will be a lot of folk wanting to test the tiny,would be good to review one on here,I like the features and like its developers think there is a market,I believe its not an entry but nearer intermediate camera going by the videos.can but wait and see but we may have to wait a while..but I hear more positive views on hear than elsewhere.:-)
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Post by Dragon Man on Jun 5, 2016 12:50:30 GMT
It certainly will capture the Novelty market.
I should explain my use of the word 'Novelty' because it means different things in different countries.
My meaning of the word Novelty is actually a positive one, not a bad one. I think in some countries Novelty would mean 'Toy', or 'silly'. That's not the 'Novelty' I mean.
here in Australia the word 'Novelty' means something 'different', 'unusual', 'trendy'. A 'Novel' idea. 'A new idea that will catch on'.
novelty
ˈ/nɒv(ə)lti/Submit
noun
the quality of being new, original, or unusual.
"the novelty of being a married woman wore off"
synonyms: originality, newness, freshness, unconventionality, unfamiliarity, unusualness, difference, imaginativeness, creativity, creativeness, innovativeness, innovation, modernity, modernness, break with tradition
"they liked the novelty of our approach" (Oxford Dictionary)
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