Nikon D3 1.10 Firmware Update

D3

So, aside from possibly leaking information about the Nikon D3X, what else is in the 1.10 firmware update for the Nikon D3? Let’s take a look.

  • A “Vignette Control” item has been added to the “Shooting Menu”.
  • A focus point brightness item has been added to the “a6: Focus point illumination” setting in the “Autofocus” category in the “Custom Settings”.
  • The “Highlights” playback display option has been moved from “Display mode > Basic photo info > Highlights” in the playback menu to “Display Mode > Detailed photo info > Highlights”.
  • When shutter speed and/or aperture are locked when shooting in LiveView mode, using the “L” (command lock) button, an “L” icon is now displayed in the camera monitor.
  • The size and color of “Demo” displayed in the monitor with playback, when “No memory card?” in the “Custom Settings” is set to “Enable Release”, have been modified.
  • The range of settings available for “ISO sensitivity settings > ISO sensitivity auto control > Minimum shutter speed” in the Shooting Menu has been increased from 1/250th – 1s to 1/4000s – 1s.
  • When a compatible Speedlight or Wireless Speedlight Commander is used, the AF assist illuminator now lights regardless of focal length.
  • When shooting in hand-held LiveView mode and the frame is magnified prior to autofocusing, operation has been modified so that display returns to the magnified display rather than full-frame display.
  • Improved white balance calculation for shutter speeds around 1/4 sec in P and A modes.
  • When attempting to crop images at an aspect ratio of 4:3 using the “Trim” option in the “Retouch” menu, the cropped image did not have an accurate 4:3 aspect ratio. Oops. Glad to hear that it really does what it claims to do now.

There you go. Like the Nikon site says, be sure to upgrade both the A and B firmwares to 1.10, or else “proper operation of your D3 is not guaranteed.” Scary!

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The Nikon D3 and D300 for Canon Owners

Canon, D3, D300

The Luminous Landscape recently posted an article called “Nikon D3 / D300 Vs. Canon,” which is designed to share Michael’s experiences buying into Nikon DSLRs after shooting with Canon for many years. He’s not switching brands, he just felt that he had enough readers interested in Nikons that he should be more familiar with them.

This gives us a very valuable and rare kind of review, which is able to focus on ergonomics and usability comparisons. I’d recommend visiting LL and reading the whole thing. But if you want my summary, I’ll do that as well.

The feature comparison starts with mirror lock-up, criticizing Canon for not making it easily available, and criticizing Nikon for not letting you use the self-timer and mirror lock-up at the same time. Personally, that’s not a big issue for me.

But Michael’s second issue has long been my main complaint with Canon and one of the things that Nikon does well: auto ISO. Some recent Canons do have this, but it’s been a long time coming, and still isn’t as flexible as what Nikon has provided for years. Michael writes:

The way Nikon implements it is to allow the user to set the lowest ISO that he or she wishes to use, and also the highest. The lowest shutter speed for the camera to automatically use also may be preset.

From then on the camera, whether set to Aperture Priority, Manual, or full Program mode,the camera will adjust the exposure parameters as usual, but, when the light level falls so low that the camera’s minimum lens aperture is reached, and the shutter speed is as low as you have set it to go, the camera will then automatically increase the ISO as much as needed to fall within these parameters. The ISO being set is always visible on the top LCD as well as in the viewfinder.

He also takes the opportunity to briefly pixel peep and comment on the stunning high ISO performance of the Nikon D3, which is very drool-worthy if you ask me.

And then there’s the increasingly dreaded autofocus mode selector on the D3, which people seem to keep accidentally bumping, often switching the camera from autofocus to manual focus without meaning to. Michael reports that this has happened to him often as well (“at least a couple of times a day.”)

A few other differences between them, such as Nikon DSLRs showing you the number of photos remaining on the inserted memory card even when the camera is turned off, which Canon doesn’t do. And the high resolution LCD screen on the D3 and D300, which he describes as a useful improvement.

He prefers the Nikon method of implementing dual memory card slots, since both are CF; current Camera 1-series cameras have two slots, but one is SD, which complicates things for professional photographers.

He gives thumbs down to the lack of anti-dust vibration in the Nikon D3, but does mention that he hasn’t accumulated any dust at all after shooting 1,500 frames with it.

And in the end — after other comparisons which I’m skipping over — he’s surprised by how many advantages the new Nikon cameras have over Canon:

Not to put too fine a point on it, but after being away from Nikon for the better part of a decade and having been immersed in the Canon gestalt since then, I was frankly surprised at the extent to which current Nikon cameras offer feature and function advantages over Canon. While some of the ones mentioned above may not be relevant to any one photographer’s needs, there are bound to be several which can be real productivity aids, if not just downright fun to have and use.

I do have to say I’m pretty surprised at the importance he places on buying new cameras, however, especially considering that the site often seems to be more focused on good photography than random technological qubbles:

No pro is going to show up on a shoot with gear that’s two generations behind the competition, and few except the most skint amateurs are happy to sit on the sidelines while better tools become available.

I don’t really buy that. I don’t know about what a pro is going to do, because that’s not my world, but I’m perfectly happy with my now-aging Digital Rebel XT, even though I could afford to sell it and buy a newer model. And I’m sure there are tons of great photographers taking tons of great pictures with cheap old cameras.

We now have a bit of a sea change happening. Nikon has flexed its considerable muscle and with the D3 produced a camera that sends a clear challenge to Canon’s nearly decade-long dominance of the digital arena. The D300, though in many ways simply a logical progression from the D200, is a much better camera than its predecessor, and along with its superior sensor offers the pro and advanced amateur a set of features and functionality that is unmatched at the moment in Canon’s line up.

For its part the full-frame Nikon D3 is a direct challenge to Canon’s 1 Series, which has dominated the pro marketplace now for more than half a decade. The 1D MKIII is right in the D3′s bore sight, and the D3 matches it or surpasses it in IQ, sensitivity, and resolution.

Canon’s flagship the 1DsMKIII certainly is the currently king of the hill in terms of resolution, but if Nikon were to put a full frame chip with the D300′s pixel density into a D3 chassis they’d have a 24MP – 29MP camera that would likely satisfy a great many Nikonistas who have been lusting after a full frame pro camera to match Canon’s lead in resolution. If you were Nikon, wouldn’t you build one?

The next couple of years should be very interesting.

Hooray for interesting digital camera developments! It’s pretty amazing to think of all of the advances that have happened in just the last 10 years; can anyone imagine what we’ll have in just 10 more? Maybe intelligent robotic camera dogs that wander around, peeing on fire hydrants and taking pictures on their own, and transmitting those photos to our own personal satellites to avoid draconian privacy invasions by the government? Ah, the future…

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Canon 1Ds Mark III and Nikon D3 Comparison

D3, EOS 1Ds Mark III

John Harrington posted an interesting comparison between the Nikon D3 and the Canon 1Ds Mark III.

Some of the highlights include the D3 apparently blowing away the Canon on high ISO noise performance. The Nikon shows significantly less noise at 3200 ISO, and perfectly usable images at 12,600 ISO, which probably isn’t an ISO number you ever thought about before:

Look at the results! I would be comfortable delivering an image from a dark Congressional hearing, or a candle-lit church ceremony with this iso. The colors are more than fine, as is the sharpness. Moreover, the noise looks more like film grain than the noise of days gone by. The noise in the Canon above looks less like noise than it’s predecessor, but it looks more like noise than the Nikon does.

I don’t really agree with the analysis of the noise results at ISO 25,800, though:

Next up is the Nikon, at iso25,800. Yes folks, that’s not a typo. And, again, sorry, but Canon can’t go that high. Can you say “I can make an image in available darkness?!?!” Again, the colors are more than fine, as is the sharpness. Moreover, the noise here again looks more like film grain than the noise of days gone by.

However, the image shows some splotchy colors, kind of like an overly compressed JPEG. It’s still an amazing result for 25800 ISO, though, and I can’t even begin to imagine what kind of lighting conditions I could shoot with at that point.

He then moves on to a resolution comparison at 3200 ISO, and because of the lower noise of the D3 he actually prefers enlarging the lower resolution Nikon D3 image over what he gets from the 1DsMkIII:

Here’s the same Nikon iso3200 file, but it has been rezzed up to be the same size as the Canon file. No sharpening has been applied. It appears there is less noise, and it’s smoother overall. I know it’s not as sharp, but when you’re so deep into this photo, either the viewing distance of the viewer or the reproduction abilities of the output device will all but take care of this concern.

Here’s the same Nikon iso3200 file but it has been uprezzed and sharpened to my tastes. It appears equal to, or better than, the Canon image. In other words, by up-rezzing the file to the size of the Canon file, I can actually achieve a more pleasing final result than the native file results from the Canon.

Unfortunately, the comparison images for these are from a Barbie doll, which looks appropriately plasticky. I’d have preferred to see an image with much more detail for a resolution and detail comparison; a Barbie doll’s plastic surface is probably the best-case scenario for noise reduction and up-rezzing, since it’s supposed to look smooth and lacking in detail.

He also posts some interesting theories about the future, and what a Nikon D3X might bring to the game:

Following in the footsteps of the D1, and the D2, so too will there be a D3x. I’ve heard that it’s comparable to the Mark III as to file size. If the D3x has a comparable filesize to the Mark III, and the high ISO’s of the D3, it’ll trounce all over the Mark III, but I’ll not hold my breath for that “perfect storm” of capabilities. It’s coming in the Spring, certainly in time to get into the hands of photographers before the Olympics.

He also briefly discusses the Foveon sensor, which seems to have fallen out of the headlines lately, but has always seemed promising.

In the end, the reviewer says that he prefers the D3, if only “by a nose,” and stating that it’s only for the way he shoots:

For large commercial jobs, where I am thinking I want a higher native resolution, it’ll be the Canon I reach for. For low light situations, which are all too common, it will, without a doubt, be Nikon. In fact, with the noise issue out of the way, and most client deliverables needing to be down-rezzed anyway, I can see that the Nikon not only would be a better solution to speeding up my post-production process, but moreover, storing the RAW/DNG files will save me significant hard-drive space in my archives over the larger Canon files.

Personally, I’m hoping to see a similar comparison, but with a different subject than a Barbie doll. No offense, Barbie dear, but you’re not really a good candidate for detail and resolution comparisons. You need more acne and pock-marked skin. Ken might dump you, but you’ll be famous on camera websites throughout the world! It’s a fair trade.

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New 1D Mark III, D3, and D300 Firmware Released

D3, D300, EOS 1D Mark III

Nikon and Canon have both released firmware updates for some of their new DSLRs (for Nikon, it’s for cameras that haven’t even been officially released yet, although a few stores seem to have started shipping them early).

Canon 1D Mark III

Canon has released firmware version 1.1.3 for the EOS-1D Mark III digital SLR. This update increases the transfer speed when using high speed SD cards, a “rare” case of the shutter not working if you got some bad timing just right, and improved autofocus tracking of low-contrast subjects.

Don’t forget that the AF improvements for bright environments were added in firmware 1.1.1. Canon just keeps seeming to find more AF issues to fix in the 1DMkIII. I don’t know if that means it had a lot of problem to begin with, or it just has picky customers who expect a lot, and who are alert for auto focus issues with the camera ever since they were first discovered a few months ago.

Nikon D3 and D300

The new firmware for the brand new Nikon D300 and equally brand new (and top-of-the line) Nikon D3 adds three optional Picture Controls, one for each of the three Nikon D2X/D2XS Color mode settings. Nikon says:

When these optional Picture Controls are registered with the D3, color reproduction simulating that of images captured with the D2X and D2XS is possible, and custom Picture Controls can also be created based on these optional Picture Controls. For black-and-white images, use the standard Monochrome Nikon Picture Control.

D2XMODE1
This optional Picture Control simulates color reproduction at a D2X/D2XS Color mode setting of I.
Skin tones and gradations are reproduced naturally with rich reproduction of tones.

D2XMODE2
This optional Picture Control simulates color reproduction at a D2X/D2XS Color mode setting of II.
This optional Picture Control is suited to images that will be extensively processed or retouched.

D2XMODE3
This optional Picture Control simulates color reproduction at a D2X/D2XS Color mode setting of III.
Choose for nature or landscape shots. Greens and blues are vividly reproduced.

“Look, D2X and D2XS owners!” Nikon says. “Easy upgrade path because of matching picture control modes! No reason not to buy a D3 now! Buy a D3 now!” Actually, buy two and send me one. That was me talking, not Nikon, but I’m sure Nikon supports that message.

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