The low-end d-slrs are the ones that sell in the highest volumes, and the camera makers iterate them VERY rapidly these days.
The low-end d-slrs are the ones that sell in the highest volumes, and the camera makers iterate them VERY rapidly these days.
Yes sir, but do you think these Rapid advancements on the lower end market will ultimately cause one model line to cancel out the other? Example, like the D3000's becoming more advance than a D5000/D5100 and even a D5200.
Was it worth coming out with an entirely new entry-level model line just for the lack of an AA filter (that these users won't benefit from/notice) and a reinvented 18-55?
Wifi & GPS? Rut roh...![]()
The low-end d-slrs are the ones that sell in the highest volumes, and the camera makers iterate them VERY rapidly these days.
Yes sir, but do you think these Rapid advancements on the lower end market will ultimately cause one model line to cancel out the other? Example, like the D3000's becoming more advance than a D5000/D5100 and even a D5200.
No. In the good/better/best marketing scheme, the "middle model" has the flip-out LCD screen, which is the feature the buyers can focus in on, and use as a rationalization for buying THAT model. Neither the 3xxx nor the 7xxx models have the flip-screen.
When did AA filters become a thing?
Is this a joke ?So I just bought my first DSLR. Coming from Canon Powershot G10, this camera feels a lot more robust, heavier... and "professional". I also feel more important when holding it for sure
Is it normal for every dslr that the sound of shutter shooting is so loud? At first I thought that this was the sound of camera and there is an option to turn it off. Its past midnight now, everyone is asleep and I feel that with every click I do my neighbours are turning in their bed cursing.
Oh, my bad, misunderstood.No, i bought d3300. I was referreing that my previous camera was Canon g10.
So far I am very pleased with it. This image was taken when zooming high above the ground, and it came out really sharp
http://s12.postimg.org/c2b49t9n1/ocenasica.jpg
Not me I'm still using a Canon 5d I'm going to upgrade to a 5Ds MKIII in a couple of years.Well, what are they supposed to do when they make a modest change to a camera? Just release it as the same thing?
What's the point of these modest changes and new model lines? Going from a 14MP to a 24MP sensor was not a modest improvement (3100 to 3200). That's an understandable change. But there's really no advantage of the D3300 over the D3200 besides being able to shoot panoramas like a cell phone; which is really just a firmware upgrade and then they removed the AA screen and slapped a new number on it. I just don't quite get it.
So now as of Feb, Nikon will be selling new the D3100, D3200, as well as the D5100, D5200, D90, D7000, and D600. Just seems like an odd move to me. and This BF we saw a huge surge in people purchasing D7000s, D5100s, and D3100s. It just seems like a way for Nikon to sell the same product at a higher price tag without actually having to put effort into making a new product.
Personally I'm thrilled, in fact the more cameras they can release with new model numbers the better. Droves of people will be rushing to upgrade to get the latest and greatest, they'll be putting their old equipment on Ebay, and the prices on all the used stuff goes down just a bit more.
So I'm personally hoping for a D3300R (Red version), A D3300A (put the AA fliter back in so people can keep debating that topic endlessly) and maybe even a D3300x - you wouldn't really have to do anything to the x model, people will buy it just because it's got an x on the end.. lol.
Nope, I'm all for as many Nikon releases this year as I can get, just helps drive down prices in the used market when folks who think you absolutely always have to have the latest model rush out to upgrade.