The other thread turned into some completely unrelated Canon warfare, so I'm starting fresh with my thoughts on the D90 after two days of use as I know a few people were interested.
Obviously this is all compared to the D50, so I've never had Live View or anything remotely technological before!
Handling
As expected there are no real issues here. Similar build/size to the D50, slightly different grip but probably feels better if anything. Got a few nice little touches over the D50 as well, such as a button to illuminate both the screens (I no longer need a torch!) and the Info button which instantly shows you every setting and what you have it set to on the main LCD.
Only thing that was missing was a button to adjust the AF Area Mode (i.e. 3D, Single, Dynamic, Auto) but I've mapped this to the spare function button, so literally everything I need during the average day out is now available without going in the menus (off the top of my head, ISO, WB, Bracketing, Drive Mode, Metering, AF Type, Exposure Compensation and Image Quality are all mapped to buttons).
Features
The screen is the most obvious thing, and considering it makes no difference to your photos, it was strangely useful today. It's so detailed you don't need to zoom in to check everything is focused and ok, it's just there in stunning clarity and detail. Live View was a new one for me, but to be honest I can't see that I will ever use it (or would ever even look at it if it wasn't for the video mode), the Viewfinder is so bright and big that it's just not needed imo. Other than that, there are far more settings/features that I haven't even thought about yet, although I did try Active D-Lighting, which amazingly works quite brilliantly (essentially brightens up dark areas such as shadows, but does it very well)
I guess the resolution is the biggest jump from my D50 (6 >> 12.3), but that's not really something I've noticed/thought about, until/if I ever get some truly massive prints done I can't see a great deal of point in it (and anyway, the 6mps of my D50 never caused me any problems despite images being published at A3 etc)
Video
I know a lot of people can't see the point and are amused by the basic feature set (no autofocus, mono sound etc), but really, the video mode is a huge amount of fun and has masses of creative potential. If you use it like a handheld video camera it's not amazing by any stretch of the imagination, but used in a creative way with more of a film/documentary approach it has loads going for it. Particularly good is the fact that you can jump between video and still photos pretty much instantly. Take a photo, press the Lv Button, press OK and you are recording video, press Lv again and you are instantly back in stills mode.
Clearly my samples are rubbish (and they look 100% better on my PC before they reach Youtube), but it gives you a bit of an idea. It's quite interesting from a photography point of view as well, because all the normal settings can be used/adjusted when setting up, you are essentially just taking a moving photograph and it requires the same processes/creativity/ideas etc. Unfortunately I forgot my tripod and to switch the sound on for video #2, so I had to balance the camera on a fence post (and it's silent!)
[youtube]bfOBuTf15Vs[/youtube]
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhudQxile1M
[youtube]ZhudQxile1M[/youtube]
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=bfOBuTf15Vs
Samples
Can't see a great deal of use with these, but it's always nice to show I guess...
My newbieness got the better of me today, and I left the JPEG setting to Vivid when I had a play around, so excuse the radioactive grass after the first shot...
All in all, pretty darn pleased. It does seem to make everything that little bit easier, autofocus seems a little bit quicker and the additional focus points make it easier to experiment with some wacky framing when shooting motorsport and you don't have the luxury of re-framing. More than any of that though, the viewfinder seems much brighter/bigger, which really makes a noticeable difference, when I was shooting with the macro attachment yesterday it just felt more straightforward as you could see what you were doing far more clearly.
Obviously this is all compared to the D50, so I've never had Live View or anything remotely technological before!
Handling
As expected there are no real issues here. Similar build/size to the D50, slightly different grip but probably feels better if anything. Got a few nice little touches over the D50 as well, such as a button to illuminate both the screens (I no longer need a torch!) and the Info button which instantly shows you every setting and what you have it set to on the main LCD.
Only thing that was missing was a button to adjust the AF Area Mode (i.e. 3D, Single, Dynamic, Auto) but I've mapped this to the spare function button, so literally everything I need during the average day out is now available without going in the menus (off the top of my head, ISO, WB, Bracketing, Drive Mode, Metering, AF Type, Exposure Compensation and Image Quality are all mapped to buttons).
Features
The screen is the most obvious thing, and considering it makes no difference to your photos, it was strangely useful today. It's so detailed you don't need to zoom in to check everything is focused and ok, it's just there in stunning clarity and detail. Live View was a new one for me, but to be honest I can't see that I will ever use it (or would ever even look at it if it wasn't for the video mode), the Viewfinder is so bright and big that it's just not needed imo. Other than that, there are far more settings/features that I haven't even thought about yet, although I did try Active D-Lighting, which amazingly works quite brilliantly (essentially brightens up dark areas such as shadows, but does it very well)
I guess the resolution is the biggest jump from my D50 (6 >> 12.3), but that's not really something I've noticed/thought about, until/if I ever get some truly massive prints done I can't see a great deal of point in it (and anyway, the 6mps of my D50 never caused me any problems despite images being published at A3 etc)
Video
I know a lot of people can't see the point and are amused by the basic feature set (no autofocus, mono sound etc), but really, the video mode is a huge amount of fun and has masses of creative potential. If you use it like a handheld video camera it's not amazing by any stretch of the imagination, but used in a creative way with more of a film/documentary approach it has loads going for it. Particularly good is the fact that you can jump between video and still photos pretty much instantly. Take a photo, press the Lv Button, press OK and you are recording video, press Lv again and you are instantly back in stills mode.
Clearly my samples are rubbish (and they look 100% better on my PC before they reach Youtube), but it gives you a bit of an idea. It's quite interesting from a photography point of view as well, because all the normal settings can be used/adjusted when setting up, you are essentially just taking a moving photograph and it requires the same processes/creativity/ideas etc. Unfortunately I forgot my tripod and to switch the sound on for video #2, so I had to balance the camera on a fence post (and it's silent!)
[youtube]bfOBuTf15Vs[/youtube]
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=ZhudQxile1M
[youtube]ZhudQxile1M[/youtube]
http://uk.youtube.com/watch?v=bfOBuTf15Vs
Samples
Can't see a great deal of use with these, but it's always nice to show I guess...
My newbieness got the better of me today, and I left the JPEG setting to Vivid when I had a play around, so excuse the radioactive grass after the first shot...
All in all, pretty darn pleased. It does seem to make everything that little bit easier, autofocus seems a little bit quicker and the additional focus points make it easier to experiment with some wacky framing when shooting motorsport and you don't have the luxury of re-framing. More than any of that though, the viewfinder seems much brighter/bigger, which really makes a noticeable difference, when I was shooting with the macro attachment yesterday it just felt more straightforward as you could see what you were doing far more clearly.