H.A. Monkey
Golden Knight of the Realm
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"Beyond" a field of view, if that means anything, means that the subject would be out of view, not blurry.
Education time, yay!!! Let’s start with the basics. Do you understand how your eye works? Because it’s got a variable focus lenses. The lenses position in your eye doesn’t change, but it’s shape changes to alter your focus point. All photo/video equipment have single focus lenses. That means the lenses placement determines focus point. The lenses are built with an internal mechanism to barely alter its placement to change its focus. That change in lenses placement is referred to as Optical Zoom. Everything after that is Digital Zoom. Digital zoom is literally like it sounds, you zoom in on the pixels of the picture. You don’t zoom in the lenses.
You’re average digital camera has a 4x Optical, and 10x digital zoom capabilities. So when someone is crying(Chuk) that an image is blurry. They’ve shown they have no clue on how anything works. The cameras optical zoom may be set to focus on objects 5 miles away with a change of optical zoom of +/- 1 mile. So if something is 10 miles away, it won’t be in focus. These images in question have obvious signs of digital zoom going on. Meaning it’s a blurry image by default! Hurray science.
So yes a cameras field of view is clearly defined even by the manufacturers, as the point in which the optical zoom has reached its max distance to focus on an object. I’m thinking you didn’t bother to study any lenses before you replied.
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