One of the great features of the Nikon D90 is the LCD digital screen. Prior to the invention of the digital camera with the LCD screen, there was the 35mm SLR camera. When looking through the view finder, the SLR camera gave a more accurate view of what the picture will look like. This was great until the digital camera with the LCD screen, such as the one on the Nikon D90, came along. The use of the LCD screen allows the user a view of exactally what the picture will look like.
Nikon D70 does not offer a liveview mode.
Amazon would be a good place to go to see recent reviews. Customer reviews will be the only recent reviews on the camera, since that specific model is two years old.
find him at the view finder
Nikon d 7100/ how to fix play back view
This is a partially a matter of opinion, but I had to research this recently so I will dare to answer. Of course it depends what you mean by best. Best price? Best performance? Combination of the two? I will assume you mean best performance and quality, ignoring price, otherwise it becomes way too complicated. This is what I came up with as of this date January 19, 2008Best point and shoot small cameras: Nikon coolpix s700, 12.1 megapixels, Canon PowerShot SD870. 8 megapixels. Nikon coolpix p5100. 12.1 megapixels, Panasonic Lumix DMC-Tz3, 7.2 megapixels. Sony Cyber shot DSC-T200, 8.1 megapixels Best Advanced Amateur Cameras (does not have full sized professional sensor): Nikon D300, - best image quality of all, but the Sony A700 is the highest quality of build Sony A700 - but no live view - better built than the Nikon D300, but the Nikon takes slightly better pictures overall, however, both have their advantages Best Professional Digital camera: (full sized professional sensor) Nikon D3 - and it costs 3 times the price of the Nikon D300
The main differences between the Nikon 35mm 1.8G and the Nikon 50mm 1.8G lenses are their focal lengths and resulting field of view. The 35mm lens provides a wider angle of view, making it better for capturing landscapes and group shots, while the 50mm lens offers a narrower angle of view, making it ideal for portraits and close-up shots with a shallower depth of field.
Finder
The key differences between the Nikon 50mm 1.8G and the Nikon 35mm 1.8G lenses are their focal lengths and resulting field of view. The 50mm lens provides a narrower field of view, making it better for portraits with a more compressed background. The 35mm lens offers a wider field of view, which can be useful for environmental portraits or group shots. For traditional portrait photography with a focus on the subject, the Nikon 50mm 1.8G lens would be more suitable.
Finder
I use a canon 7D and have seen that the clarity of a picture is same as taken on a Nikon D90. However, it depends upon how one looks at a camera and a photo taken from a photografer's point of view. To me canon is better than a nikon...
View finder A digital camera may have a viewfinder. If it does not have a screen on which it displays a "live view". (The Leica M9 has both)