@ItsKrishal - The CMOS sensor lets it shoot continuously images at 10 FPS or Quarter-VGA (320x240) video at 240 FPS. When played back this high-speed mode looks like slow-motion by a factor of 8X.
@WeAre2FamousEnt - The P90 cannot shoot HD. This feature was added when Nikon started using CMOS sensors with the P100 and now P500 ultra-zooms. The compact P300 also does it too. See another of my videos.
Question for anyone to answer please: Is the video quality in 720p in youtube vids the same as it would look on an hdtv? i ask this since hd in my hdtv doesn't look as sharp and detailed as youtube hd vids. i have a polaroid 19 inch hdtv. thanx
@goalkeeper994 That is impossible to answer precisely since I do not know what computer you have, what monitor, resolution and size of YouTube player you use. That being said, your TV is probably incapable of producing a sharp HD image since it does not have a native HD resolution (1440x900 is not HD). That forces it to oversample which makes things softer. Buy yourself a real 720p (or better a 1080p) HDTV with _dot-for-dot_ mode. This will give you the best sharpness.
Can i ask- What is the HS feature on the p100? what does it do?
ItsKrishal 7 months ago
@ItsKrishal - The CMOS sensor lets it shoot continuously images at 10 FPS or Quarter-VGA (320x240) video at 240 FPS. When played back this high-speed mode looks like slow-motion by a factor of 8X.
neocamera 6 months ago
hi, i have a P90 nikon coolpix. how do you set up the camera to hd?
WeAre2FamousEnt 8 months ago
@WeAre2FamousEnt - The P90 cannot shoot HD. This feature was added when Nikon started using CMOS sensors with the P100 and now P500 ultra-zooms. The compact P300 also does it too. See another of my videos.
neocamera 8 months ago
Question for anyone to answer please: Is the video quality in 720p in youtube vids the same as it would look on an hdtv? i ask this since hd in my hdtv doesn't look as sharp and detailed as youtube hd vids. i have a polaroid 19 inch hdtv. thanx
goalkeeper994 8 months ago
@goalkeeper994 That is impossible to answer precisely since I do not know what computer you have, what monitor, resolution and size of YouTube player you use. That being said, your TV is probably incapable of producing a sharp HD image since it does not have a native HD resolution (1440x900 is not HD). That forces it to oversample which makes things softer. Buy yourself a real 720p (or better a 1080p) HDTV with _dot-for-dot_ mode. This will give you the best sharpness.
neocamera 8 months ago