Canon EOS 450D Hands-on Preview at DP Reviews

 Canon EOS 450D

The new EOS 450D is the successor of Canon DSLR camera EOS 400D, 350D, and 300D which first released more than four years ago. And the good news, this new camera comes with wider functionality but still has a $200 lower price compare to the last generation, 400D. Nice..

On the third page of this review you’ll find a detailed breakdown of all of the changes and updates compared to the EOS 400D but the headlines are; a larger 3.0″ LCD monitor, Live View with both passive and contrast detect AF, Spot metering, improved auto-focus, 3.5 fps continuous shooting a larger viewfinder and a switch SD/SDHC for storage (all previous cameras in this range were Compact Flash). Other features appear to be inherited from the EOS 40D; 14-bit image pipeline, Highlight Tone priority, optional High ISO noise reduction, ‘My Menu’ and display of the ISO sensitivity on the viewfinder status line.

Nikon D60 Reviewed by DP Review

nikon d60

Nikon D60 is considered as entry-level SLR camera. Featuring 10MP image sensor, the expected price of D60 starting from $630 (body only). It comes with 2.5-inch TFT LCD, and built-in flash. For the rest of features please visit dpreviews.com.

it’s still one of the most affordable cameras in its class and it represents the perfect ‘upgrade’ camera for anyone who has outgrown their digital compact camera and is looking to dip a first toe in the world of the digital SLR. Its output is consistently good (the JPEGs are excellent and its raw files have lots of dynamic range headroom), it’s a pleasure to use and, handles well and weighs very little. And as I’ve stressed throughout this review, it makes getting pleasing results incredibly easy.

Review Quote: Nikon D3

Nikon D3

As always, dpreviews.com has done in-depth camera review. And they just reviewed the new Nikon D3, the camera for the real professional. You can read the full review here, and before going further,you can fast-read its product highlight below:

Nikon D3 Key Features

* First ever Nikon DSLR with a Full-Frame (36 x 24 mm) sensor (dubbed the ‘FX’ format)