I wonder why Nikon has a tendency to get stuck on a particular pixel count, update essentially the entire line to that count, and refuse to offer any other options? They did this once before at 6 megapixels, when they were offering the D50, D70, D100 (semi-discontinued) and two lower-resolution pro bodies (D1x and D2h). They have now fixated on 12 megapixels, and offer the D90, D300, D700 and D3 at that count, and nothing higher. I certainly see their argument about high-ISO performance, and I see a place for a comparatively low resolution full-frame camera like the D3 and D700, for high ISOs and fast action. However,do we really need four variants on the 12mp SLR, including two (D3 and D700) that are so similar? There are real quality differences between what even the best 12mp camera (undoubtably Nikon's) can provide and what a 20+mp camera can give, especially at lower ISOs - why not offer something with the higher resolution for those of us who don't go above ISO 800 (a full-frame version of the D300 sensor would be in the neighborhood of 27mp), and the D300 is great up to ISO 1600? A 27mp D700x would give Nikon bragging rights in the pixel wars, provide the highest TRUE low-ISO image quality out there, and offer a real choice between ultra-high performance at low ISO and high-ISO capability. At $4000 (in a D700 body), it would deliver a kick in the teeth to both Canon and Sony. That would be a landscape and studio photographer's dream camera... It's also an easy camera for Nikon to make - they've got the body (D700), they've effectively got the sensor by simply making a D300 sensor with more area, and the D700's data path is actually fast enough (it can do 8 FPS at 12 mp, so it should be almost 4 at 27). It would also have a very nice high-speed crop mode almost for free, because it would simply be a D300 when cropped.
I'm a landscape and nature photographer who has shot both Nikon and Canon extensively over the years. I do tend to print big, and I like subjects with a lot of detail, so what is keeping me shooting Canon and considering the Sony Alpha 900 is the fact that 12mp is simply too low, despite some brilliant lenses on Nikon's part (I actually never sold my Nikon 105VR macro when I reluctantly moved to Canon, hoping that Nikon would come out with the camera I wanted). I just don't like Canon's ergonomics nearly as much as Nikon's, and I might well switch back if Nikon offered something with the same detail capabilities the competition has...
-Dan
I'm a landscape and nature photographer who has shot both Nikon and Canon extensively over the years. I do tend to print big, and I like subjects with a lot of detail, so what is keeping me shooting Canon and considering the Sony Alpha 900 is the fact that 12mp is simply too low, despite some brilliant lenses on Nikon's part (I actually never sold my Nikon 105VR macro when I reluctantly moved to Canon, hoping that Nikon would come out with the camera I wanted). I just don't like Canon's ergonomics nearly as much as Nikon's, and I might well switch back if Nikon offered something with the same detail capabilities the competition has...
-Dan