Nikon D60 First Review Posted

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:23 pm on Monday, March 3, 2008 —

A first look review at the D60 shows pretty much what we expected, some minor technical upgrades from the D40x but no major differences.

Nikon D60

Active D-lighting is a good addition for an entry level camera and the image quality is already shown to be great. High ISO performance may be slightly improved.

The new 18-55mm VR kit lens looks pretty nifty too.

I’m looking forward to the D80 replacement we are all still waiting for with CMOS censor, live view and super handling!

Whether Nikon will be as successful with the D60 as with the other models will not depend on the quality, for the quality is excellent. It will depend more on the answer of the competition to this winning concept. Will there be an attack on the price, or will the competition be able to equip their entry-level model with even more features? While working on this review, Canon introduced the EOS 450D and my first impression is that the battle for the most successful entry-level model is an ongoing one.

Read the full review here:

Nikon D60 | Digital Camera Review

Tags: , , , , , ,

716 views - Filed under: Equipment, Nikon

Nikon Annouces the D40x Replacement at PMA - Nikon D60 - 10.2 Megapixels

ShaolinTiger posted this at 3:50 pm on Tuesday, January 29, 2008 —

This one is a bit of a surprise, I guess the Nikon D40x must be selling extremely well for them to release such a minor update after such a short time, Nikon usually upgrades models after 2 years…and before that this would have been classed as a D40s, not a megapixel upgrade but a minor feature upgrade (use interface, LCD, rotating display, dust reduction).

Nikon D60

It’s an interesting strategy - but if it keeps funding the development of groundbreaking cameras like the Nikon D3 - I fully support it.

I was actually expecting the announcement of the D3x (a higher megapixel but slower D3 similar to the Canon EOS 1Ds MKIII) to pop up next, or even the Nikon D80 replacement.

As for the D60, the only real differences are it now includes an anti-dust system that incorporates a self-cleaning sensor unit that shakes off dust, coupled with an airflow system designed to channel dust away from the sensor. The model also adds active d-lighting, a stop-motion recording mode and Expeed branding. The kit will be with the new 18-55mm VR lens, released recently.

Perhaps the same sensor, with a new image processor? Does that mean the D60 will be giving even better noise control, image acuity and punchy colours than the D40x?

It also follows immediately after the upgrade of Canon’s entry level model the Canon EOS 450D!

Read the full release here:

Nikon announces D60

Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

852 views - Filed under: Equipment, Nikon

Canon Announces the New EOS 450D (Rebel XSi) Entry Level dSLR - 12 Megapixels

ShaolinTiger posted this at 2:11 pm on Thursday, January 24, 2008 —

There have been a few rumours about this recently, it was about time for Canon to update their entry level model with the new Digic III processor and the Live View technology they have put into their other cameras like the 1D MKIII and the EOS 40D.

Canon EOS 450D

There will be two kits, body only for $800 and one with a starter 18-55mm lens for $900

  • 12.2 megapixel CMOS sensor
  • SD/SDHC cards
  • Larger viewfinder
  • Live view mode, including contrast-detect AF
  • Improved 9-point AF system
  • Spot metering
  • 3.0″ LCD monitor
  • Continuous shooting at 3.5fps for up to 53 JPEG (6 RAW)

Finally Canon’s entry level cameras has spot metering! Something that has been missing (and rather important) for quite some time.

It’s also Canon’s first camera to use only SD cards (Supports SDHC).

Read the full release here:

Canon EOS 450D / Rebel XSi brief hands-on

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

1,676 views - Filed under: Canon, Equipment

Olympus E-410 EVOLT Review - First Look

ShaolinTiger posted this at 12:46 pm on Wednesday, June 20, 2007 —

Definitely looks interesting, just remember if you get one to turn the noise reduction down and set sharpening -2, then you will be rocking!

Olympus E-410 Evolt

Default image quality is good, if not as crisp as the competition. However, if you play with the settings for a while, or more specifically turn Noise Filter off and set Sharpness to -2 (to compensate for the default high sharpening used to overcome the softening effect of the Noise Filter) you’ll see that the camera is capturing just as much detail (if not more) than other ten megapixel digital SLRs, and that the lens is more than up to the job too.

So what’s the final word? At the end of the day I found myself quite liking the E-410, it’s a grower that offers great value for money in a small compact package, has some real stand-out features and hasn’t been crippled to ‘fit into the range’ like similar models from other manufacturers. Just make sure you turn off the Noise Filter!

They seem to have fixed the overexposure issue too, looks like a nice camera. I’ll be looking forwards to see how the new Olympus E-510 EVOLT turns out.

I guess the downside is the lack of dynamic range, I would think this is due to their smaller than standard sensor size (remember Olympus has a 2x crop factor not 1.5x or 1.6x like Nikon or Canon).

Olympus E-410 EVOLT Review at DPReview

Tags: , , , , , , , ,

647 views - Filed under: Equipment, Olympus