Nikon D70s preview

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What you need to know

Preview

Previewed 20 April 2005

Previewed by Aimee Baldridge

With the D70s, Nikon makes some incremental improvements to its popular consumer digital SLR, the D70. Although it retains the 6-megapixel resolution of its predecessor, the Nikon D70s is better equipped to compete with the new consumer dSLR heavyweight, Canon's 8-megapixel EOS 350D. It also takes on Olympus's Evolt E-300 and Pentax's *ist D.

Upside: The original D70 remains an excellent camera that got high marks from us. Nikon has updated it with a larger 51mm (2-inch) LCD and an improved menu system, as well as more custom settings, a remote control, and compatibility with the PictBridge direct-printing standard. Nikon also claims performance improvements in its autofocus system as well as its continuous-shooting speeds. With a high-speed CompactFlash card, you can capture a burst of 144 JPEG images at a rate that Nikon clocks at 3fps.

Downside: This is not a major upgrade, and the D70s's resolution isn't the highest in its class. Advanced photographers will have to purchase Nikon's Capture 4.0 raw-file processing software separately, although the company does include PictureProject, a more mainstream image-editing, organising, and sharing program.

Outlook: The D70s has recently become available in the UK. You can purchase various camera packages. The £850 bundle includes the camera body, a rechargeable battery and charger Digital Vari-Program software, and Nikon's new AF-S DX Nikkor 18-to-70mm f/3.5-to-f/4.5G IF-ED lens.

Additional editing by Tom Espiner

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