The Nikon D90 is a difficult camera to rate. When viewed as a 'traditional' SLR, it is simply an excellent camera that I very much enjoyed using. All the frequently used functions have direct controls assigned to them, be it aperture, shutter speed, ISO speed, file quality, drive mode, AF mode, AE Lock – you name it. Despite being a relatively complex camera, the D90 proved highly intuitive to use. The extra functions that distinguish it from the D80, such as ultrasonic sensor cleaning, 3D focus tracking, 50% faster continuous shooting speed and Active d-lighting are well worth the price difference between the two models.
In use, the D90 felt extremely responsive, could lock focus quickly and confidently on virtually anything, while the meter handled almost any scene you threw at it very well, necessitating much less use of the exposure compensation function than I'm used to. Together with the excellent meter, Active D-lighting proved highly useful in photographing high-contrast scenes. The quality of the images captured by the camera was astounding, in terms of resolution, colour, tonality and signal-to-noise ratio alike.
It is only the 'add-on' features like Live View and video recording that deserve criticism. The Nikon D90's Live View implementation is decidedly sub par, despite the glorious screen it is delivered on. There is no live histogram, the magnified view appears interpolated and the contrast-detect auto-focus is extremely slow. The highly useful Virtual Horizon Indicator of the D700 didn't find its way to the D90 either.
Zoltan Arva-Toth
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