Archive for July, 2008

Fuji Finepix S100FS Full-Review Posted

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Fuji calls this camera the most sophisticated digital camera ever made. Well, the Fuji Finepix S100FS is certainly very capable. This prosumer super-zoom sports a 11 megapixels SuperCCD sensor, a mechanically-linked 14.3X wide-angle optical zoom lens with stabilization, an ISO range of 100 to 10000 (yes, ten thousand), expandable dynamic range by up to 400%, film-simulation modes, full manual controls, custom white-balance, a flash hot-shoe, a sync-port, manual focusing, a 2.5″ LCD and a VGA movie mode. With all that, there is very little missing and this camera finds itself with no similar competitor. Find out how it performs in Neocamera’s full-review of the Fuji Finepix S100FS.

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I am a critic…

Friday, July 25th, 2008

Statues Pointing

This is something that comes back once in a while: A camera gets reviewed at Neocamera, we give it the best rating possible and someone writes telling us that this is a truly wonderful camera and that we are completely wrong about all the bad things we said about it. The bad things they are usually referring to is the list of Cons.

No camera has an empty list of Cons, even the best one. Why is that? Because I am a critic. It is my job to look at each camera and report findings. Now, I’m not looking for flaws or to torture the camera, I simply try to take good pictures. In doing so, and because I have tried so many cameras, I know how efficient and comfortable each operation can be. No manufacturer has implemented the most efficient way for everything the camera can do. I wish someone did, but that has not happened yet. Some manufacturers are extremely good at ergonomics and implementing functionality and most manufacturer have innovated somewhere and implemented something great that helps photographers take better pictures more efficiently.

Bringing back beautiful photographs of whatever subject is the most important. That is what drives a camera’s rating first. Image quality is king because it cannot be compensated for. Ergonomics and such help greatly with the usability of a camera but do not prevent it from taking great pictures.

Here are innovative features from several manufacturers that make photography more efficient :

  • Canon Rebels have a mode called A-Dep which uses distance information from all focus points to select an appropriate aperture so that the depth of field covers the distance to each focus point.
  • Pentax introduced a TAv on the K10D mode where the photographer selects both shutter-speed and aperture while the camera ensures a proper exposure by selecting an appropriate ISO.
  • Nikon DSLRs have details control over the behavior of Auto ISO. Both the Auto ISO range and minimum shutter-speed can be selected to let the photographer decide the point at which shutter-speed would be too low for a subject.
  • The eye-start sensor on the Sony Alpha A700 not only controls the rear LCD, it can also activate autofocus to reduce the time it spends focusing when the shutter is pressed halfway.
  • Olympus has spot-metering modes that let the photographers select what brightness corresponds to highlights or shadows in the final image, instead of having to select the mid-tone which is often more difficult.
  • Fuji created a sensor with two photosites per pixel to capture more dynamic range in a single exposure than any other digital camera.
  • Konica-Minolta invented sensor-shift image stabilization. The technology was passed on to Sony but has become so important that it is now used in cameras from Pentax, Olympus, Casio, Samsung, Nikon and Fuji.
  • Konica-Minolta also pioneered the eye-start sensor which appears in camera’s from Sony, Canon and Nikon.

There are many more such innovations. The point is that each of these innovations improve some aspect of photography and that no camera does all of them. So, criticism should be taking as it is, a description of some of the things that could be better. Each point should be evaluated in terms of how it affects your photography. Not all cons are equal and the same con is not equal to itself when faced with different situations.

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Nikon D60 Full-Review Posted

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Neocamera just posted its full-review of the Nikon D60. This is Nikon’s latest entry-level DSLR, an upgraded version of the D40X. The Nikon D60 is one of the smallest DSLR cameras but still features a 10 megapixels sensor with built-in dust-reduction, unlimited 3 FPS continuous drive, 3 metering modes which include spot-metering, full-manual controls, custom white-balance and a 2.5″ LCD.

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Canon Digital Rebel XS

Saturday, July 19th, 2008

Canon Digital Rebel XSThe Canon Digital Rebel XS is the latest camera in Digital Rebel line-up of entry-level DSLRs from Canon. The Rebel XS, known elsewhere as the EOS 1000D, fits in at the bottom end of Rebel family, replacing the Rebel XTi. The new XS model features a 10 megapixels sensor with 1.6X crop-factor, ISO range from 100 to 1600, 3 FPS continuous shooting and a 2.5″ LCD.

If these specifications seem familiar, it is because those numbers also describe the Digital Rebel XTi. Indeed, the new Rebel XS is largely an XTi with a modernized body. As a matter of fact, the XS looks a lot like the more advanced XSi. The new body design includes a deeper hand-grip and a compartment for SD-HC cards instead of Compact Flash cards. While there are numerous minor differences between the XS and the XTi, the only other notable one is that the XS has 7 autofocus points system while the XTi uses 9.

There are more differences between the XS and XSi than the XS and XTi. Most significantly, the Canon Digital Rebel XSi features a 12 megapixels sensor, 0.87X magnification viewfinder (vs 0.81X), 3.5 FPS continuous shooting, a 3″ LCD and spot-metering. The addition of spot-metering alone makes the XSi more capable photographically and the larger viewfinder makes it more comfortable to use. As we do not know what the sale price of the XS is going to be when it ships, it is hard to comment on the relative value of these cameras. Although if the difference is less than $100 USD, it would be hard not to choose the XSi. Those in the USA who wish to be among the first to own a Canon Digital Rebel XS can pre-order one from Amazon here.

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Nikon Announces Two New Perspective Control Lenses

Sunday, July 6th, 2008

Nikkor PC-E 45mm F2.8DAdding to the recently announced PC-E Nikkor 24mm f/3.5D ED lens, the PC-E Micro Nikkor 45mm f/2.8D ED and PC-E Micro Nikkor 85mm f/2.8D expand photographic possibilities of Nikon DSLR cameras. These newly introduced lenses features a tilt/shift mechanism that alters the relation between the optical axis of the lens and the image plane, thereby enabling Perspective Control (PC) which is ideal for architecture and product photography.

Up to these recent announcements, only Canon had any perspective correction lenses in production. This meant that many photographers were left no choice but to go with them for perspective control. Nikon’s new offerings cover 24 to 85mm among 3 perspective control lenses with moderate apertures of f/2.8 or f/3.5. Being highly specialized products, having such lenses enable more high end professionals to chose Nikon.

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