| > A camera does not take point sample snapshots, it integrates lightfall over little rectangular areas. Integrates this information into what? :) > A modern display does not reconstruct an image the way a DAC reconstructs sounds Sure, but some software may apply resampling over the original signal for the purposes of upscaling, for example. "Pixels as samples" makes more sense in that context. > It is pretty reasonable in the modern day to say that an idealized pixel is a little square. I do agree with this actually. A "pixel" in popular terminology is a rectangular subdivision of an image, leading us right back to TFA. The term "pixel art" makes sense with this definition. Perhaps we need better names for these things. Is the "pixel" the name for the sample, or is it the name of the square-ish thing that you reconstruct from image data when you're ready to send to a display? |
Into electric charge? I don’t understand the question, and it sounds like the question is supposed to lead readers somewhere.
The camera integrates incoming light into a tiny square into an electric charge and then reads out the charge (at least for a CCD), giving a brightness (and with the Bayer filter in front of the sensor, a color) for the pixel. So it’s a measurement over the tiny square, not a point sample.