You'll see all the detail in your full
35 mm size image with the KODAK PROFESSIONAL DCS Pro 14n Digital
Camera. This digital SLR camera has the industry's first full
35 mm size CMOS sensor and boasts an incredible 13.89 million
total pixels. Choose the Basic mode for an easy, first-time
shot. Or, select your preferences to give it the look you
want. Now, you can also get the resolution you need with DCS
Pro 14n's variable-resolution raw files. Designed for professional
portrait, wedding, event, and commercial photography, the
DCS Pro 14n adds speed to your workflow. Its FIREWIRE connectivity
- at a 12 MB per second transfer rate - is up to four times
faster than previous DCS Camera models. The DCS Pro 14n Digital
Camera - coming to a dealer near you from the industry leader
in pro digital photography - Kodak Professional. Visit
Rizcamera.com for the Kodak DCS Pro 14N Digital Camera
Designed for professional portrait, wedding,
and commercial photographers, the DCS Pro 14n camera is one
of the most technologically advanced cameras on the market
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ZD
Net.com
When Kodak announced the DCS Pro 14n digital SLR (dSLR), we
had trouble deciding what was most exciting about it: the
13.7-megapixel effective resolution, the 36mm-by-24mm sensor
(the area is essentially the same as a 35mm-film frame's),
or the sub-$5,000 street price. Offering those specs at such
a low price did require some compromises, however. Many of
the 14n's components are from an amateur Nikon body, and the
CMOS sensor suffers from poor high-ISO performance and a tendency
to produce artifacts, though those are usually correctable.
The end result is a pro camera that can--under the right circumstances--deliver
superbly detailed images to portrait, school, commercial,
and architectural photographers who own Nikon F-mount lenses.
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Imaging-resource.com
Kodak of course needs no introduction in the field of photography,
their name being almost synonymous with photography for much
of this century. They were one of the first digital camera
makers in the US, and for a long while were the only game
in town when it came to digital SLRs. Recently, as camera
giants like Canon and Nikon have entered the digital fray
themselves, many people (myself among them) have wondered
whether Kodak would be able to continue to compete in the
d-SLR marketplace. more