DXO launch Camera Benchmark Site
Introducing dxomark.com, the first camera benchmark based on RAW image
quality Sponsored by leading image science company DxO Labs, this free
online resource delivers in-depth, objective RAW-based image quality
data to enablefair analysis and comparison of digital cameras.
PRESS RELEASE
San Diego, California, USA, and Paris, France – Nov 17th, 2008 – At the Image Sensor 2008 conference in
San Diego, DxO Labs today unveils dxomark.com, a new website delivering key objective metrics of sensor
performance for a variety of cameras measured directly on the RAW image. Available as a free online
resource, dxomark.com makes it possible for the first time to assess the intrinsic quality of a camera before
the impact of any RAW conversion.
There are many valuable resources reviewing the image quality of digital cameras, but none of them
consider the actual RAW signal straight from the camera sensor,” explains Nicolas Touchard, Vice President
of Marketing, DxO Labs Image Quality Evaluation business. “Demanding photographers who shoot in RAW
should only care about the genuine quality of the RAW image, yet until now they have had to rely on
measures based on converted RAW images, obviously biased by the processing applied to them, whether
embedded or performed offline with a software RAW converter. Furthermore, as RAW converters evolve
and improve, the latent potential of RAW images can only be gauged by analyzing the RAW images
themselves, projecting the potential quality achievable with the ultimate RAW converter. This is why we
believe that our approach will dramatically change the way photographers evaluate digital cameras.”
dxomark.com provides in-depth measurements of all the relevant characteristics of a sensor: actual ISO
sensitivity (which generally differs from the value reported by the camera), SNR, dynamic range, tonal
range, color depth and sensitivity, metamerism, etc. dxomark.com already covers 50 popular cameras,
including DSLRs, medium-formats and bridges. The site will be updated on a regular basis with new
cameras.
Introducing dxomark.com, the first camera benchmark based on RAW image quality
dxomark.com RAW image quality database relies on DxO Analyzer, the world’s leading turn-key laboratory
solution for image quality evaluation. Thanks to its accuracy, completeness, and reliability, DxO Analyzer
has become the reference tool for numerous leading imaging industry players, photography magazines and
websites.DxOMark Sensor, a simple scale for RAW image quality DxOMark Sensor aggregates dxomark.com’s large and complex set of measures into a simple scale allowing for easy comparison between camera performances. The DxOMark Sensor scale is designed to map to real world photographic scenarios such as portrait, landscape and action photography, ensuring that the scale is relevant to photographers.
DxOMark Sensor is naturally an open scale, as it will need to cope with performance improvements driven
by the evolution of sensor technologies. dxomark.com Insights, the view of an insider
To help understand the ramifications of such a new tool, and to assist those who want to take advantage of
the RAW image quality database, dxomark.com features a number of technical papers, collectively referred
to as “insights,” written by DxO Labs scientists. These technical articles aim in particular to give an original
perspective on the technology challenges faced by the imaging industry.
Early Insights include a paper on how pixel count impacts noise, providing an unexpected yet well-
supported contribution to this controversial topic, along with an analysis of the evolution of camera sensor
performance over the past few years.
The Insights section will be updated on a regular basis with more technical papers.
A free resource for photography journalists and experts
Accessible for free to visitors, dxomark.com has in fact been designed to serve the imaging community, and
more precisely the photo press. Photography journalists and experts can now complement their analyses
and reviews with an evaluation of the intrinsic performance of cameras, regardless of optics or processing
considerations.
Visit DXO Mark: www.dxomark.com