Grey or ‘Water’ Camera Goods vs Original - From Nikon Themselves

ShaolinTiger posted this at 2:44 pm on Tuesday, July 31, 2007 —

“What does Nikon have to offer?” VS “What does a grey item offer?”

Besides the functionality and specifications of a camera, another deciding factor is of course the price. Grey market items are relatively cheaper when compared to a Nikon camera purchased through the right channel, yet what are the disadvantages of purchasing a cheaper product?

When money becomes an issue, you’ll probably tend to think along the lines of, “Now what does Nikon have that is worth my every penny?”

Grey sets have certain dis-advantages such as:

  • May not be able to receive full technical support as the warranty is valid only in the country where the camera was purchased from.
  • You will also have to pay to have your camera serviced if it was bought from another country.
  • The manual may not be in the preferred language of your region.
  • The manual might just be a photocopy
  • Owners of grey items may not be able to download online software and firmware upgrades available from the Nikon site, due to incompatible serial numbers.
  • Items may not meet mandatory safety and certification codes, or may not have been handled properly, therefore they may malfunction easily.

We have also confirmed this in Malaysia by writing to Nikon direct about the warranty issues, they said:

In terms on how to differentiate between original set is our Nikon standard warranty card is “yellow” colour and also on the warranty card will stated the camera distributed by Nikon (M) Sdn. Bhd. So, if your warranty card is other than the colour which is above mentioned, it means that they are from grey products.

So be careful!

Nikon VS Grey Market

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

519 views - Filed under: Equipment, Nikon

Nikon Maintains dSLR Lead Over Canon

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:57 pm on Friday, July 27, 2007 —

Ah Nikon maintaing the lead in Digital SLR sales..

But is that a good thing? Too many entry level models in the Nikon range recently, where are the serious cameras for professionals and advanced amateurs? The D200s with better noise control, the D3x that can top the 1D MKIII.

If you look at it from an optimists point of view its all good though, as more sales = more money = better R&D for better products.

So it could all turn out well in the end.

Nikon has led Canon in its share of the DSLR market in Japan for the past six months, according to latest sales figures.

‘Nikon nudged Canon from its pedestal in December with the introduction of the D80 in October,’ reports Japanese trade publication PEN News Weekly.

‘Since then it also launched the D40 and D40x and has been maintaining the lead for six months, with a 48% market share in May, while Canon ended up second with a 35% market share,’ adds the report which was based on figures released by market research firm BCN.

The statistics reveal a turnaround on a year ago when Canon held a 53% market share in Japan, leaving Nikon behind with 33% in June 2006.

The figures show that Sony’s market share dropped to 2.6% in May this year, from the near 20% share it held in July 2006.

Pentax’s share also fell compared to last summer, from 13% in July 2006 to 7% in May this year – putting Pentax in third place behind Nikon and Canon.

Olympus share has picked up since March - rising to 6.1% in May, a growth attributed to the launch of the Olympus E-410 digital SLR.

The figures were compiled from sales data received from 2,200 stores across Japan, including ‘large electronic home appliance merchandisers’, says PEN.

Source: Amateur Photographer

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

774 views - Filed under: Canon, Equipment, Nikon

How Camera Lenses are Made

ShaolinTiger posted this at 5:30 pm on Wednesday, July 25, 2007 —

If you want to know why your lenses are so expensive, check this video out.

Pretty intense eh? $1000 USD per kilo just for the glass!

Tags: , , , , , ,

506 views - Filed under: Equipment

Panasonic Unveils New Lumix FZ-18 with 18x Zoom and 8.1 Megapixels

ShaolinTiger posted this at 5:00 pm on Tuesday, July 24, 2007 —

Clearly a rival of the recently released Olympus SP-550 UZ “Ultra Zoom” camera, which also features an 18x optical zoom.

Introducing the Panasonic Lumix FZ-18.

Panasonic Lumix FZ-18

The Olympus got reasonable reviews, it’s not very fast, not very sharp and the pictures are ok - but it has 18x zoom! The ultimate travelling partner perhaps.

Now Panasonic counters with this, a massive 18x zoom to match and wider at the wide angle end with 28mm rather than the normal 35/36mm and of course the quality of the Leica lens helps. Plus the great Panasonic stabiliser. They just really need to sort out the image quality and noise problems with the Venus processor.

Looks to be a well specced camera.

  • 8.1 effective Megapixel CCD
  • F2.8-4.2, 18X optical zoom lens, equivalent to 28 - 504 mm
  • Optical image stabilization
  • 2.5″ LCD display with 207,000 pixels + electronic viewfinder with 188,000 pixels
  • Full manual controls
  • Intelligent Auto mode features auto scene selection, face detection (for up to 15 faces), and continuous AF
  • High sensitivity mode can boost ISO to 6400 (oh, good)
  • RAW image format support
  • Records widescreen movies at 848 x 480, with sound
  • 27MB onboard memory + SD/SDHC/MMC card slot
  • Support for conversion lenses and filters
  • Uses proprietary li-ion battery; 400 shots per charge
  • Comes in silver and black
  • Ships this September for $400

But please - ISO6400? On a Panasonic, they must be kidding!

And why can’t people make f/2.0 lenses like the old Canon G2!

You can read more here:

First look: Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ18 preview

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

10,855 views - Filed under: Equipment, Panasonic

Open Source Image De-Noising with GREYCstoration

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:30 pm on Tuesday, July 17, 2007 —

GREYCstoration is an image regularization algorithm which is able to process a color image by locally removing small variations of pixel intensities while preserving significant global image features, such as edges and corners. The most direct application of image regularization is image denoising. By extension, it can also be used to inpaint or resize images.

GREYCstoration is based on state-of-the-art image processing methods using nonlinear multi-valued diffusion PDE’s (Partial Differential Equations). This kind of method generally outperforms basic image filtering techniques (such as convolution, median filtering, etc.), classically encountered in image painting programs. Other comparable image denoising techniques are available (for instance, Noise Ninja, Neat Image ) but are not open-source, and the corresponding algorithms are kept secret.

On the contrary, the source code of GREYCstoration is freely available and distributed under the CeCILL License (compatible with the well-known GPL). It gives similar results (not to say better) to existing closed-source denoising filters, and is absolutely free to use. Compared to other PDE-based regularization methods, our approach has several advantages : It performs very fast and is able to preserve thin image details since it works at a sub-pixel accuracy.

The tool is still a little bit hard to use (command-line based), but I hope the simple C++ API will ease the integration of the algorithm in more user-friendly interfaces. Previous versions of GREYCstoration are already available in Digikam and Krita.

There is a GIMP plug-in version available now which makes it a lot easier, I hope to see a Photoshop version soon.

There are a couple of GUI version here and here too.

You can download it here:

GREYCstoration-2.5.2.1.zip

Important note : You will need to install the ImageMagick’s package in order to be able to read compressed image formats (JPG,PNG,etc…). On Unix systems, this package is often installed by default, on Windows, you can get it here. Please download one of the static package only.

You can read more here.

Tags: , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

406 views - Filed under: Other Software, Software
Next Page »