SaxonIV wrote in post #11782147
the reason people say that lower is better is its all relative. just look at the 1D3 its only 10 mp, sure they would have wanted to go to 20 + mp, but at the time they couldn't keep the noise levels down with the pixels that close together. here, a few years later the 1D4 comes out and is just fine with more mp.
Just to expand on this -- camera research and development (R&D) has been very focused on improving technology, including efficiency in collecting light the result has been "cleaner" pixels.
From there, different makers follow somewhat different paths. Canon, who for years led the way in improving low-light/high ISO/low noise performance, has also been using this higher efficiency in increasing the pixel count while not creating noisier images but actually balancing the two enough so that the newer generations get better low noise performance even while increaing the megapixels. If you think about it that's pretty cool.
Nikon has made huge strides in its low noise performance -- they've held back in the big increase in pixel count to do this.
So, yeah, you could say that Nikon shows "less pixels are better" but then something to consider is that if you size a file from the canon 5D2 or the 1Ds3 down to the size of a "less pixels" Nikon body the noise is reduced as well.
So, really, having more pixels doesn't "take" anything from the image.
i think the best use for mp is it gives you crop ability. lets think about this, if you take an image that is 5184 × 3456 (17.9 MP). now if you crop one quarter of the image (half way up and half way to the side) you are only left with only 2591 × 1637 (4.2 MP) thats a big difference. think about if you only started with 10 mp. you would be left with only 2.5, hardly large enough for much of anything.
True that. Another way to approach it: with the "full frame" 5D2, we think "wow, 21 megapixles -- Canon really overdid it with pixels! And yet, in reality, these "full frame" cameras have the same "pixel density" as the old 8 MP 30D, meaning if you cropped down to the size of a "crop" sensor (cutting out over half the image) you would still have an 8MP image which you could get a great print of at a "real" size (like 12x18) that is suitable for framing and displaying.
And, the crop cameras, which have huge resolutions/pixel densities, have not yet reached a "limit" -- from what I've seen, they do not yet out-resolve a good lens shot in a way that optimizes sharpness. Until they do, there is not real "waste" of pixels, and you also have the huge benefit of cropping when you need to.