re: Do you shoot "Raw" or "Jpeg"
Even when you shoot JPEG, you are shooting RAW. The camera captures the RAW data and then processes it in it's JPEG "engine" to give you a JPEG. In essence, you have a built-in digital darkroom in your camera. This topic has been beaten to death more then once. There is no right or wrong answer. My cameras do a fine job of producing JPEGs, but they also have amazing built-in RAW converters that i can use; therefore, no need to plunk myself down in front of a computer all the time. This is what i can adjust manually with the in-camera RAW converter: sharpness, color, film simulation, exposure, color space, noise, you can push/pull, dynamic range, white balance, white balance shift, highlight tone and shadow tone. As Marcel said, why limit yourself to just one? Shoot both. I shoot mainly JPEG because of two reasons: 1) my camera produces amazing JPEGs. 2) I really don't want to sit in front of a computer for hours since i sit in front of one all day in the first place. I also shoot RAW, but i do so when i have a certain vision and know i will want to "manipulate" the photo more then i can a JPEG. Again, different strokes for different folks. There is no right or wrong answer.