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Nikon d90 Worthy? 2020 Responses
Last post: 4 months, 1 week ago | Thread started: Aug 27, 08, 5:31 p.m.
- 1pxsolid
Yo, just saw the d90 posted on CPLUV ( http://www.cpluv.com/www/feedite… )
I'm thinking of buying a new camera. I currently have a Canon 20d which I like, but have slowly fell out of love with... I'm thinking that switching to Nikon might reignite the shutter bug within.
- Aug 27, 08, 5:31 p.m. – Permalink
- duckofrubber
Come to the dark side, my child. But I'd go with the d700.


- Dog-earAug 27, 08, 5:47 p.m. – Permalink
- acescence
video mode/live preview is cool, but there are definite drawbacks.. no autofocus while recording vid and auto focus is dog slow in live preview.
i have seen video from this though and i must say it is quite astounding. due to the quality of lenses available and the big sensor, you can achieve results not possible for less than 10k+ in a proper video camera.

- Dog-earAug 27, 08, 9:43 p.m. – Permalink
- Dr_Rand
from NYT:
High-definition video, at that. Stunning, vivid, 720p, widescreen, 1024-by-720, 24-frames-per-second video, with the color and clarity that only an S.L.R. can provide. Now, most people’s first reaction is: “Well, duh. My $200 Canon has been capturing video for years.” Or maybe: “What a gimmick. Who’d ever use video on a $1,000 piece of photographic equipment?” Or, at best: “Well, I guess it might sometimes be useful to snag a video clip when I’m out there shooting stills.”
Multimedia
Slide Show
Test Drive: Nikon D90 S.L.R.
But there’s something much bigger going on here. Remember: any control, effect or lens that’s available to the D90’s still photos is now available for videos.Think of all the freedom you gain that you wouldn’t generally have on a camcorder: control over focus, depth of field and exposure; special effects like fish-eye, monochrome and vivid; and excellent image stabilization when using a Nikon VR lens.
But here’s the real mind-blower: You now have a video camera that takes interchangeable lenses. Before the D90, if you wanted a hi-def video camera with removable lenses, you’d pay $7,000 for the camera alone, and another $7,000 to $20,000 for each lens.

- Dog-earAug 28, 08, 1:50 p.m. – Permalink

