Abstract: It would seem logical for the first DSLR with video capture to come from a company that also makes camcorders. Nikon defied that logic, though, by creating the D90 ($1,000, estimated street, body only; $1,300 with AF-S DX Nikkor 18-105mm f/3.5-5.6G ED ...
Abstract: Nikons D90 Through the Eyes of a Video Pro - Page 2Okay, Ill stop beating the D90 up because there is some good here. Frankly, the price-per-pixel ratio is outstanding if youre looking to buy a fun DSLR. This is a great place for students and other ...
A very easy-to-use, high-quality digital SLR for shooting both HD video and still images; deserves props for being the first camera to pull off this one-two punch successfully; excellent low-light shooting with low noise
HD video is slightly jittery at 24 frames per second; panning in video mode produces some lag; test unit I tried had persistent error message and camera lock-up issue.
If, like me, you never thought you’d have much use for shooting video with a digital SLR, it’s worth it to give the D90 a whirl. As the first camera on the market to offer both HD video and stills—now since joined by the Canon 5D Mark II...
Good image/color quality, Good AF and shutter performance, Good build quality, Good high ISO performance, HD video capability, Good flash performance/recycle times,
HD video time limited, No AF for video, Limitations of current technology mean video is via Live View only,
Folks who've been paying attention to Nikon DSLRs for the past several years have noticed a trend: a high performance Nikon comes out, followed some months later by a lower priced camera that offers a chunk of the performance at a fraction of the price...
Abstract: The Nikon D90 (Review, Specs, Recent News, $899.99) disappointed us with most of its video performance. While it did capture wonderful colors in low light, it couldnt compete against dedicated HD camcorders in most shooting conditions. That doesnt me...
Abstract: Nikon D90 Video The Nikon D90s video capabilities are unusual enough (the first SLR to offer video recording) that we felt they deserved a page of their own, to cover them. Resolution & Recording TimeThe Nikon D90s movie resolutions include 1...
First DSLR with movie recording ability, Can use optical zoom during filming and apply other settings, Excellent image quality, Good low-light performance, Fast speeds
No autofocus in movie mode
The D90 isn’t just another DSLR joining Nikon’s Editors’ Choice–winning lineup (although it certainly delivers the same superb image quality); it’s also the first DSLR in the world to record video. Although the recording itse...
Exceptional feature set for its price point in the market, Worlds first SLR capable of recording HD-resolution video, New kit lens has good optical quality, much better than average for kit lenses, New kit lens offers VR (image stabilization), Camera ...
quot;Rolling-shutter" motion artifacts in HD movie recording are distracting, No provision for external audio input for movie recording, Autofocus in Live View mode is slow, limited to contrast-detect only; no phase-detect AF option with Live Vie...
Im starting to feel strange about saying Nikons done it again, but it looks like they have. The Nikon D90 looks like a genuinely excellent camera for the intermediate photographer, and a great choice as a full-featured, light weight body for those wh...