GrillMouster
Mouster of the Grill
- Joined
- Dec 13, 2005
- Messages
- 1,236
I've been waiting all day to see if someone here would mention the announcement of Nikon's D3s coming in November. I'm surprised it hasn't come up yet.

Just $5,200! I'll take two. That way my family can sell them to pay for my funeral after my wife killed me![]()
Another dad that we hang out with from our DS group was trying "help" the guy out. Saying he could "hold" one of his camera's for him. LOL I told him, hell, you got 4, you wont miss 1 of them!!
Right??








Nice to see them sticking with 12mp. I (and I think most photographers, pro or otherwise) would much rather have fewer mp and better ISO noise control.
I agree. Personally I dislike getting files from 2nd shooters who are using the Canon 5DMII. The files are HUGE and pretty cumbersome. Eats up more than the necessary amount of file space. And for purposes of event photography, it's pretty much overkill.
dmccarty - 102,000, not 12,000... 12,800 is becoming less uncommon, showing up on at least a couple APS-sensor DSLRs even.
...
The increaased ISO sensitivity may be a game changer, but we'll have to see more hands-on reviews to really know for sure. ...
I think you'll see more ultra-high resolution cameras over time. Even at 24 megapixels, full frame cameras still don't have the pixel density of APS-C cameras. While few people need to make the poster sized prints that 24 megapixel cameras allow, they are great for extending reach through cropping. The resolution is there when you want it for large prints or tight crops. You can scale down the resolution with sRAW when you don't want or need the resolution. The downscaling process recaptures most of the benefits of fewer larger pixel sites.

