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Title: Nikon D40 Review - Digital Cameras
Pros: Excellent feel and compact size, Very customisable menu architecture, Nice guidance for dSLR newbies, Excellent noise characteristics for high-ISO shots
Cons: Slow kit lens, Occasionally slow to focus, Only 6 megapixels, Raw editing software costs extra, Control scheme can be awkward, No automatic sensor cleaning
Summary: The Nikon D40 is a great transition camera for going from point-and-shoot to your first dSLR.
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75/100 |
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Title: Nikon D60
Pros: Optically stabilised 18-55mm kit lens; convenient onscreen user interface; compatible with a wide variety of lenses and accessories
Cons: Pricey for what it offers; lens-based image stabilisation is less flexible than sensor-shift offered by some competitors
Verdict: Despite modest improvements in performance and a couple of new features, Nikon's D60 fails to impress and costs more than some competing models
Summary: Nikon's D60 is a good example of the current breed of entry-level dSLRs. With physical controls similar to that of a compact camera, this dSLR pumps up the features, allowing you to tweak your images in the camera, from fixing exposure and red-eye reducti
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72/100 |
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Title: Nikon D80 Review by Thom Hogan
Pros: D1x image quality at half (or less) the price, , .I'm getting results out of the D100 that equal or exceed those from my D1x (though sometimes that takes a bit of post processing I don't have to do with the D1x). The more I use the camera, the more I disc
Cons: It's not a D1, . If you need fast flash sync, fast motor drive, or largerbuffer size, a D1h or D1x is what you want. [Or a D2h], , , JPEG quality, . The JPEG engine generates slightly soft JPEG images. Turning up sharpening isn't necessarily a good choice
Summary: Well, here we go again. As I write this, we have four enthusiast 10mp cameras on the market, with Canon, Pentax, and Sony being the competition this time around. Last time we had this type of burst of consumer DSLR product the rollout from the manufacture
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100/100 |
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Title: Nikon D80 Review by Thom Hogan
Pros: D1x image quality at half (or less) the price, , .I'm getting results out of the D100 that equal or exceed those from my D1x (though sometimes that takes a bit of post processing I don't have to do with the D1x). The more I use the camera, the more I disc
Cons: It's not a D1, . If you need fast flash sync, fast motor drive, or largerbuffer size, a D1h or D1x is what you want. [Or a D2h], , , JPEG quality, . The JPEG engine generates slightly soft JPEG images. Turning up sharpening isn't necessarily a good choice
Summary: Well, here we go again. As I write this, we have four enthusiast 10mp cameras on the market, with Canon, Pentax, and Sony being the competition this time around. Last time we had this type of burst of consumer DSLR product the rollout from the manufacture
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100/100 |
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Title: REVIEW-NIKON D60 DSLR
Pros: This is a responsive camera that is a pleasure to use. The lens, which feels flimsy, is in fact a very good kit lens. Images are sharp and contrast is good. The image stabilisation is effective. Image quality straight from the camera is consistently good.
Cons: As with the D40/D40X, Nikon has chosen not to install a focus drive in the camera body. This means that the range of auto-focus lenses available for the camera is very limited. There is no Nikkor auto-focus prime lens that will work with the D60. And anot
Verdict: This camera has many of the qualities we expect from Nikon - responsiveness, excellent ergonomics and consistent image processing - in a lightweight body. On its own terms it is a fine camera and no doubt will retail for considerably less than its RRP. Fo
Summary: This 10 megapixel camera is Nikon's cheapest DSLR. As tested it came with the 18-55mm kit lens with vibration reduction. The combination is small and light with good ergonomics. It has two dust removal functions - the traditional filter shake plus the "ex
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N/A |
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Title: Nikon D300 Digital SLR Digital SLR Review
Pros: Excellent advanced Autofocus system, Live view in two modes, Optional battery grip increases performance and enables multiple battery use, Great rear screen, Rugged build quality, High ISO noise control, One touch zooming on screen, Lens presets, Ergonomi
Cons: Loss of ISO100, Needs high-speed cards to get the best from it, Battery grip needs extras to allow full range of batteries
Verdict: Despite the D300 being a replacement for the semi-pro D200, Nikon's professional users can rest assured that the camera is also a worthy replacement for the D2 range of DX format professional models and will carry the format well into the future. Build an
Summary: After a long gap between the D100 and the D200, Nikon surprised a few folk with the announcement in August -07 of the D300. Now, less than two years after Ian Andrews tes
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100/100 |
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Title: Nikon D200
Pros: Plentiful controls and accessories; strong performance; excellent image quality; rugged body.
Cons: JPEG artifacts crimp image quality; no TIFF mode.
Summary: Aggressively priced and stuffed with pro-quality features, the rugged Nikon D200 digital SLR offers the best of the D2X at about one-third the price.
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83/100 |
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