nikon

How photo products (mostly didn't) evolve during 2011

The successor to the full-frame Nikon D700 and Canon's follow-on to the EOS 5D Mark II were widely expected to put in an appearance of some sort during 2011. They didn't.

It appears as if the D800 will be a 36-megapixel camera that will launch in early 2012. What Canon's prosumer follow-on (5D Mark III?) will look like and when it will debut is anyone's guess. The combination of the Japanese earthquake/tsunami and Thailand flood tragedies contributed to significant delays throughout the photographic industry.

Other cameras were announced but are still not widely available, apparently … Read more

Play music with this camera 'lens'

Photographers who enjoy their music on the go might want to add this interesting camera novelty item to their collection.

Designed to look like a Nikon 55-200mm telephoto lens, the device is actually a portable speaker. Instead of the typical glass optical elements, the gadget sports a speaker driver. It's also capable of playing music from various audio sources such as smartphones, computers, and other devices with a 3.5mm stereo minijack. … Read more

The 404 933: Where it's the nightmare before Nokia (podcast)

What's an 8-foot-tall Lego man doing on the beaches of Siesta Key Village, Florida? We don't have the answer, but it's the third one that's washed ashore in the last three years--similar occurances were reported three years ago in Brighton, England, and Zandvoort, Holland; each bearing the same cryptic messaging: "NO REAL THAN YOU ARE."

Yahoo News did the dirty work and inquired about the phenomenon to Lego's assistant brand relations manager, who vehemently denied, on record, any affiliation with the stunt, eliminating the possibility of it being a viral stunt. Who knows, maybe it was printed on a 3D imaging device by the folks at MakerBot!… Read more

Full-size megazoom cameras compared

Call them bridge cameras, longzooms, superzooms, or megazooms (as we do), they're all pretty much the same thing: a large lens slapped on the front of a point-and-shoot camera.

While that's a bit of an oversimplification, the fact remains that though these are full-featured models with digital SLR-style bodies, they still have the shooting performance and photo quality of a compact camera. That said, if you're after a long lens, point-and-shoot simplicity, and an affordable price (at least more so than for a dSLR that has comparable lenses), you've come to right roundup.

Editors' note: This post was originally published October 26, 2011, but is updated frequently. It was updated May 8, 2013, to include the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX300.

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Rumors of 36-megapixel full-frame cameras

With all the hullabaloo lately over medium-sensor compact cameras and ILCs, some photographers would have been justified despairing over the dearth of news about full-frame (35mm-sized sensor) cameras. Well, despair no more. The rumors have started to flow surrounding a new 36-megapixel full-frame sensor from Sony that's slated to appear in a new Sony SLT-series camera in 2012 and a Nikon D800 before year's end.

As far as I can tell, few details are available about the sensor, but Nikon Rumors has some not-so-crazy speculative specs, including 4fps burst shooting, 1080/30p video, larger LCD, and triple card slots. SonyAlpha Rumors says that the long-rumored A99 will incorporate the sensor, replacing the dSLR A900 with a fixed mirror model. That means waving good bye to the stunning optical viewfinder of the A900, albeit replacing it with a more video-friendly model.

While I'm really looking forward to seeing what Sony and Nikon do with the new sensor, I'm not looking forward to the inevitable posts about how this spells the death of the medium format, just because the resolutions overlap. That said, the bigger format may take a hit from people who buy it just to produce the big pictures.… Read more

Nikon 1 J1 review: Worth the wait?

Nikon took its time introducing its interchangeable-lens camera system, dubbed the Nikon 1 series, and though I don't agree with a lot of the choices the company made, it clearly put thought into the cameras before rushing out me-too versions of competitors' products. The entry-level model, the J1, firmly targets point-and-shoot upgraders with its feature set, but the implementation is a mixed bag and the price is a bit steep for that crowd.

Take for instance, the sensor, which is smaller and lower-resolution than all but the even-more-expensive Pentax Q. With a 2.7x focal-length magnification factor, that means … Read more

Nikon reveals svelte mirrorless ILCs

After much waiting, and lots o' leaks, Nikon finally unveiled its mirrorless interchangeable-lens camera line. But while you'd think the veteran Nikon would debut to an audience with pent-up demand for its product, signs point to Nikon fans greeting the Nikon 1 series J1 and V1 with less enthusiasm than expected. For example, Nikon Rumors ran a poll with more than 30,000 respondents--most likely Nikon fans--who indicate as of just before the announcement, almost two-thirds of them aren't planning to buy the camera(s). And that was before they'd even seen or had final specs for it.

That may be due in part to the sensor, dubbed "CX" to match the company's DX and FX mount/sensor systems, which turns out to be a surprisingly small, low-resolution version with a magnification factor of 2.7x, putting it between Olympus/Panasonic's Four Thirds sensor and Pentax's extra-small model.

While Nikon will likely be able to keep the photo quality up thanks to the relatively low resolution and support for 12-bit raw files, the smaller sensor negatively impacts the ability to get a nice shallow depth-of-field at a wide aperture, even with old Nikon lenses mounted via an adapter.

On one hand, it sounds like Nikon's pulling out all the stops with respect to autofocus, introducing a hybrid system that automatically determines whether to use contrast or phase-detection autofocus. Both Olympus and Panasonic have pushed contrast AF pretty far, though, so it remains to be seen how much of an advantage this confers on the cameras' performance.

Nikon has also done some interesting things with motion/movies, including a Motion Snapshot mode, which records a still image and about a 1-second clip, then plays it back at about 0.4x speed (slow motion) with music. There's also Smart Photo Selector, a 20-shot burst mode that saves the camera-determined best five photo.

Here are the camera specs in their competitive landscape:… Read more

Nikon to finally release a mirrorless ILC

Japanese business publication Nikkei has reported that Nikon will launch its first mirrorless interchangeable lens camera (ILC) later this year. It will go for between $900 and $1,300, a typical price range for this class of product.

Currently, strong players in this category include Panasonic and Olympus with their Micro Four Thirds system and Sony with its NEX range.

We've heard rumors of Nikon entering this market, with even a picture of a concept product emerging last year. Given how well Panasonic and Olympus are doing, observers have been expecting the two dSLR market leaders to join in, too. It looks like the big N may have beaten its keen rival Canon to the punch. We'll bring you more information as details emerge.

(Source: Crave Asia via Reuters)… Read more

Nikon Coolpix extravaganza (fall 2011 edition)

Few things upset Nikon digital SLR fans more than a bunch of Coolpix announcements. That's understandable, but at least with this batch we get some of Nikon's more unique offerings and just in time for the 2011 holiday shopping season.

Nikon announced six new models today, five of which are refreshes of older models. At the top is the new Coolpix P7100, which finally gets an articulated LCD, but not much else. Then there's Nikon's latest projector cam, the S1200pj, that can now use its built-in pico projector to display content directly from your iPad or … Read more