Hi Jonathan,
yes the Kodak seems a wonderful camera.  The quality is exceptional.  My only 
reservation is one of ergonomics.  When handling it 2 weeks ago, I found that I was 
continually knocking the little button on the RHS rear of the camera, which was 
putting the camera in review mode.  Not a problem, it'll just waste battery power!!  I 
have the software here, so I'll check out the profile issue.  I certainly didn't 
notice any fringing on the shots I took, but it was by no means an exhaustive test!!!!

Kind regards

Matt Littler 
NOVA - THE IMAGING WAREHOUSE
http://www.novadarkroom.com


-----Original Message-----
From: Jonathan Coleman [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Tuesday, June 29, 2004 12:38 AM
To: Prodig Main
Subject: [PRODIG] Is the Kodak DCS ProSLR/n as goof as it
appears?[MESSAGE NOT SCANNED]


Went to a seminar today and the Kodak SLR/n was being demonstrated. One 
face of, extremely impressive and worth upgrading from my trusty D1x's, 
but is that really the case?

There has been much talk about this camera in Prodig, especially in 
recent weeks so I  would really appreciate feedback on specific 
questions before I commit to this camera.

I am a portrait photographer and work in a studioonly and would want to 
deal  exclusively in the best quality RAW option on the Kodak.

What I like,  as demonstrated by the Kodak rep:

Highly customiseable - better than the D1x.
The manipulation of RAW data is much more advanced/better than the much 
older D1x.
Extremely sharp images capable of aggressive selective cropping without 
loss of quality..
i.e. it would be possible to  pull a 20x16 off a quarter, or less, of 
the image area without visible degradation.
Very accurate and lifelike skin tones - akin to the Sigma SD10.
Has been described as the "ideal studio camera."

Photodesk
All thumbnails open properly oriented - automatically!
Extremely rapid, global, batch image correction including over and 
unexposure correction of all images with a single click. With a 12 stop 
latitude, this should mean that we will hardly have to worry about 
exposure since all black and white clipping will be corrected with a 
single click!
Colour balance all images with one click  by sampling the grey off a 
Macbeth Colourchecker.
(Not sure whether this gray balance can be saved and applied to all 
images from future sessions. As a studio-only photographer, we work in a 
calibrated environment - so one gray balance should fit all, provided it 
can be saved as a default).
Wide range of preset profiles (apparently, the 'Events' setting is ideal 
for studio portraiture).
Turn selective images B&W or Sepia etc - BUT can you save those amended 
images with a new file name so both original and amended images are 
retained?
Similarly, can you crop and image and then retain both original and 
cropped versions with different file names

What I have heard from other users that concerns me:
Camera
Given the very large file sizes - battery life is closer to 40 frames 
than the claimed 400.
Fringing, although this has all but been eliminated in version 5.0.1 of 
the firmware onwards.

Software
Actually slows down dramatically as processes files.
Not as good as Nikon Capture or PS CS
Not possible to add own camera profiles

Finally
If the hype is right, it should be possible, with just a couple of  
clicks, to adjust the exposure and colour balance of a whole days work 
so that it is near enough right and then only minimal finishing will be 
required in PS of the images the client chooses - Is this Really True - 
if so, it would really speed up our workflow.

Is the colour correction really as accurate as claimed?

Is working in Photodesk, with such large files, really fast.

Can Photodesk be installed on more than one machine (I am thinking of  
image preparation for viewing and  manipulation for printing, which are 
done on two different PCs.

Conclusion
This morning, I was very happy with my D1x's but now I think I have seen 
a camera that will produce far higher quality (both in terms of colour 
and sharpness), and allow images to be batch manipulated extremely quickly
Result:- higher quality for less labour.

IS THIS REALLY THE CASE.

All advice gratefully received.

Jonathan


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