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Mary, Feb 25, 2013,New York.

 

 

Nikon claims a startup time of 0.13 second, with a 0.052-second shutter lag. The focusing system is boosted too, with 51 AF points and 15 cross-type sensors in the central area, including one that's even compatible with f/8 maximum aperture optics, such as an f/5.6 lens paired with a teleconverter. On the connectivity front, there's two SD card slots, with SDXC and UHS-1 compatibility, a mic input jack, headphone jack, and an HDMI port that supports uncompressed 1080p output without an info overlay. You can add GPS with the GP-1 accessory, Ethernet with the UT-1 Communication Unit or wireless control capability with the WR-1 Transceiver. The magnesium-alloy body is weather sealed of course, and it's both lighter than the D7000 and slightly narrower and easier to hold.

 

Do you hurry to fork over two grand for Nikon's full-frame D600? You may are interested in the company's new D7100, a lightweight DSLR with a new DX-format (APS-C) .The 24.1-megapixel cam's imaging technology follows a now-commonplace industry trend by dropping the optical low-pass filter in favor of enhanced resolution. Normally, the D700 successor includes a sensitivity range of ISO 100 to 25,600 (Hi 2), along with improved noise reduction for better results in low-light.

 

Nikon reps could not share pricing for the new WR-1 Transceiver which acts as both a transmitter and a receiver, enabling shutter speed, aperture, ISO and other settings control from a distance of up to 394 feet. However, have the camera's MSRP: the D7100 is about to ship for $1,300 without any extras, or $1,700 if you opt for a kit with an 18-105mm lens. It's scheduled to hit stores in late March and we reckon it'll be worth the wait. And a handful of other goodies are ready to boot. The 24.1-megapixel cam's imaging technology follows a now-commonplace industry trend by dropping the optical low-pass filter in favor of enhanced resolution. Basically, the D7000successor includes a sensitivity range of ISO 100 to 25,600 (Hi 2), along with improved noise reduction for better results in low-light.

 

There's a 3.2-inch 1.229M-dot LCD, an OLED display inside the viewfinder for crisper data readout, and plenty more if you read on! Speed improvements reach beyond consecutive shooting. Nikon claims a startup time of 0.13 second, with a 0.052-second shutter lag. The focusing system is boosted as well, with 51 AF points and 15 cross-type sensors in the central area, including one that's even compatible with f/8 maximum aperture optics, such as an f/5.6 lens paired with a teleconverter. On the connectivity front, there's two SD card slots, with SDXC and UHS-1 compatibility, a mic input jack, headphone jack, and an HDMI port that supports uncompressed 1080p output without an info overlay (for clean streaming to an external recording device). You could add GPS with the GP-1 accessory, Ethernet with the UT-1 Communication Unit or wireless control capability with the WR-1 Transceiver. The magnesium-alloy body is weather sealed of course, and it's both lighter than the D7000 and slightly narrower and easier to hold. There's a D4-like EXPEED 3 processor with support for 6 frames-per-second shooting in any mode, even when capturing 12- or 14-bit RAW images. A unique 1.3x DX crop function boost that rate to 7 fps, however, while capturing a maximum of 15.4-megapixel stills and 1080/60i or 50i video, compared to 1080 30/25/24p in the regular mode.

 

The customers show high concern about this brand new Nikon Camera. According to this passage, we believe that this Nikon will occupy a big share of this camera market. We could just be patient and to witness a big event happen.