Report Abuse

Report this review to the Review Centre Team

Here at Review Centre we work hard to make sure we are the best place on the internet for honest, unbiased consumer reviews - we are grateful for your help in keeping us that way!

911079

Why are you reporting this review?

If you represent this business why not claim your page by creating a Free Business Account where you will receive improved review monitoring functionality.


☆☆☆☆☆

“If you're going to shell out 1,300 quid on a camera,...”

written by zombie371 on 11/12/2007

Good Points
Wonderful camera. Great features. Fast focusing and shooting. Just one (not so) minor flaw:

Bad Points
Can't use RAW mode if your software is below Photoshop 5.0. Can't use RAW mode if your software is Photoshop 6.0 unless you can get 6.0 to run. In short, can't use RAW mode.

General Comments
If you're going to shell out 1,300 quid on a camera, chances are you'll be at least a semi-professional, if not a pro. And so you'll be using Adobe Photoshop and running the camera in RAW mode, rather than cheap and cheerful jpg mode (and hey, if all you want are jpegs then this may be your dream camera).



It's a great pity then that Nikon forgot to ask Adobe to release a RAW plugin for this camera before they released the kit. Oh, Adobe have done a plug-in for the LATEST version of Photoshop, but it may come as a surprise to Nikon that when I traded in my D200 for a D300 I wasn't expecting to have to buy a complete photo editing suite and a new computer to make it run. I would be happy to upgrade to the latest Photoshop, if only I could make it run on my 18 month old computer. This, by the way, I suspect has less to do with computing power and more to do with Adobe?s well documented broken security features.



The current net wisdom is to throw away the advantages of shooting in raw and convert the files to DNG format, but Adobe's DNG plug in is not a richly featured as the RAW plugin. No point in shooting RAW if you can?t take advantage of it.



You may think that this is an Adobe problem, but Adobe didn't change the RAW format - Nikon did. Backward compatibility is one of the oldest rules in the world. Nikon did good to introduce better technology, but they should have thought out the delivery.



So, if like me you expect to be able to USE the pictures that you take with your camera then don?t buy a D300 unless you also a) Buy a very new computer and b) Install the latest version of Adobe Photoshop and spend a few weeks making their anti-piracy software work and c) spend a grand or so on a training course because the new Photoshop is so unlike the old one.



If however, you want to impress your friends with a very cool paperweight or some of the world's most expensive jpegs, then this is the camera for you.

Was this review helpful? 0 3