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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
12 hours after a new D7000, I am thinking at this early moment I should return it
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<blockquote data-quote="fotonut" data-source="post: 31257" data-attributes="member: 7489"><p>Not trying to be a wise guy, but is "this it"? I mean if you are using the system and it stops responding, how do you recover? Do you keep switching back and fourth between old style focusing and occasionally try the new one out to see if it is working again? What is the work flow when something works part of the time and not the other? Can you explain step by step what you do when you are shooting a scene such as guests at a party and the camera stops working? Do you walk to another location pretending that this was intentional, hoping that the camera focus processor will calculate the next shot OK? I mean seriously, I would like to know what the "getting used to this system" that everyone talks about entails? </p><p></p><p>The reason I ask is that I see this a lot that having issues with this focusing system is "user error" and the operator is blamed for not enjoying a system that for me works some of the time but not others. The problem is when it stops working, it <strong>really</strong> stops working and you have to do something more drastic than just hitting the shutter multiple more times to get it to focus; in other words something in the photo has to move or the subject has to move before it starts even trying again.</p><p></p><p>I am thinking it is technology that is not quite there yet, like the live view is not up to par with a under hundred dollar point and shoot, like a video system that is spectacular in pixel quality but can't work in stereo or can't follow focus or when it does, records a grinding sound, somewhat sub-par with a three hundred handi-cam.</p><p></p><p>I am not here trying to deface Nikon, but again is "this it"? </p><p></p><p>Thanks,</p><p></p><p>P.S. Earlier poster, firmware is at 1.02, yes</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fotonut, post: 31257, member: 7489"] Not trying to be a wise guy, but is "this it"? I mean if you are using the system and it stops responding, how do you recover? Do you keep switching back and fourth between old style focusing and occasionally try the new one out to see if it is working again? What is the work flow when something works part of the time and not the other? Can you explain step by step what you do when you are shooting a scene such as guests at a party and the camera stops working? Do you walk to another location pretending that this was intentional, hoping that the camera focus processor will calculate the next shot OK? I mean seriously, I would like to know what the "getting used to this system" that everyone talks about entails? The reason I ask is that I see this a lot that having issues with this focusing system is "user error" and the operator is blamed for not enjoying a system that for me works some of the time but not others. The problem is when it stops working, it [B]really[/B] stops working and you have to do something more drastic than just hitting the shutter multiple more times to get it to focus; in other words something in the photo has to move or the subject has to move before it starts even trying again. I am thinking it is technology that is not quite there yet, like the live view is not up to par with a under hundred dollar point and shoot, like a video system that is spectacular in pixel quality but can't work in stereo or can't follow focus or when it does, records a grinding sound, somewhat sub-par with a three hundred handi-cam. I am not here trying to deface Nikon, but again is "this it"? Thanks, P.S. Earlier poster, firmware is at 1.02, yes [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D7000
12 hours after a new D7000, I am thinking at this early moment I should return it
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