Olympus Evolt E520 DSLR Camera
August 31, 2009

Olympus Evolt E520
I have used quite a lot of DSLRs before buying this Olympus Evolt E520. DSLRs like Nikon D40, D40x, D80, D200, Canon D350, D400, D450 have been used by my hand already . But in the bottom line it was the Olympus E520 I fell in love with. Read more
Nikon D300s 12MP CMOS Digital SLR Camera
August 27, 2009

Nikon D300S is the Nikon D300 successor features 12.3-megapixel DX-format CMOS Image Sensor, Continuous Shooting up to 7 fps, D-Movie HD Video for capturing cinematic 24 fps, Read more
Nikon D3000 10MP Digital SLR Camera
August 26, 2009

Rumors of a Nikon D3000 have been circulating for some time now and you don’t have to be clairvoyant to foresee that the Nikon’s least expensive DSLR needed an update. The D40, which held this position for over two and a half years (an impressive feat in such a fast-moving market segment) is finally disappearing from the shelves to begin building up ‘classic’ status among the million-plus users for whom it represented their first DSLR experience. Even the more recent the D60 has been on the market for more than 18 months (having itself been little more than a position-clarifying rebadging of the D40X introduced in March 2007) and has only just been jostled out of its position by the D5000. Despite this combined age and what now look like fairly modest feature sets, their combination of small size, big name, low prices and top-notch usability have seen both products become a huge hit for Nikon (D60 remains one of the top selling DSLRs in most markets).
Nikon D90 DX 12.3MP Digital SLR Camera
August 26, 2009

August 27, 2008, Nikon announced details of their latest DSLR, the D90, the successor to the D80. Pixel has increased from 10MP to 12MP, continuous capturing is now faster at 4.5 fps and the LCD has gone from a low resolution (230,000 pixel) 2.5” unit to a high resolution (920,000 pixel) 3” unit Read more
Canon Rebel XSi 12.2MP Digital SLR Camera
August 26, 2009

The Rebel XSi seems to be a combination of the Canon Rebel XTi and the Canon EOS 40D, with a few new features of its own thrown into the mix. It has the basic form of the XTi like same shutter speed range, the same flash sync speed and the same ISO range. However it also has features of the EOS 40D such as Live View, Highlight Tone Priority, High ISO Noise reduction, Spot metering, a 14-bit A/D converter and viewfinder ISO display. Read more




