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Digital
Camera Interpolation Explained
By Jakob Jelling -
Snapjunky.com
In a device such as a
digital camera it is very important to understand the very basic aspects of
the device so as to properly operate it and give it the due respect it
deserves. Such a topic is interpolation! These are accessories that help the
digital camera to perform the technologically advanced features that it is
capable of. In extreme explanatory and simple terms it can be summed up as
that interpolation refers to software programs that can effectively enlarge
image resolution beyond the actual resolution by adding extra pixels using
complex mathematic calculations. Now, this is a feature that can be
absolutely useful in providing a good success to a user.
Looking into the
technical aspects it can be stated that interpolation is a technique where
the spatial resolution of an image is increased from its original size to a
higher or larger resolution. The spatial resolution of an image is simply
its horizontal x vertical pixel count. For example 1600 x 1200. Again
getting into further intricate details it can be stated that there are two
techniques of interpolation commonly used, they are software and hardware.
Again software interpolation can be performed on a digital image using a one
of a number of image editing programs such as PhotoShop. This is often
termed as resizing and is done with a computer, performed on an image file
from a digital camera that already exists in a
file format such as JPG. Hardware interpolation involves the resizing of
an image, but it differs from software interpolation in that the image is
resized algorithmically inside the camera during the image processing
sequence and before the image has been saved as a JPG image file.
Also, it can be noted
here that JPG is a compressed image file format. Whenever a file is saved as
a JPG file, image data is lost in the compression process. Image data is
thrown away in exchange for file-size efficiency. Software interpolation is
a process performed after the JPG losses have been applied. Hardware
interpolation occurs inside the camera prior to JPG compression and before
JPG losses have been applied. The resulting hardware interpolated images are
of superior quality to a comparable image interpolated in software.
These are basically the
important points as discussed in the above lines regarding the digital
camera interpolation. The explanation is worth for every user who can be a
novice as well as an expert and thus uncovers another great feature of a
digital camera, the process of interpolation.
Author:
Jakob Jelling is the founder of
http://www.snapjunky.com.
Visit his
digital camera & camcorder guide
and learn how to take better pictures and shoot better movies. |