Today I took this miracle. The video is top notch (picture quality), 30fps at 720 lines (quite good for Internet or laptop presentations), which puts the D7000 up a notch above its older counterpart, the D300s. ISO can be raised to 800-1600 easily (although depending on what size to use later, of course). The light sensitivity of the matrix is โโโโsurprising (although I will immediately say that I am not a pro, but just learning), while noise is not visible up to a very strong approximation. At ISO 100-600 the picture is clear. Two slots for cards (3 options for their use: filling the second after the first, duplication, or one jpeg / second RAW). Built-in editor, practically "photoshop" (you can edit the photo in every possible way directly in the camera - color correction, cropping, enlightenment of shadows, etc.). Who needs it - you can even print photos directly from the camera on the printer (without a computer at all). The shutter button is very convenient and understandable - the half-press is very logical and easy, the shutter release is also, but there is still a border, I personally liked it. You donโt have to press, which means there is no push when the shutter is released. The monitor is protected by a transparent protective panel (holds firmly). The battery capacity is on top (the hand is tired of pressing the button, despite the fact that the battery is used up by only 15%), and this is mechanically driven through a screwdriver with an 80-200 lens ! It sits comfortably in the hand, almost like the Canon D7, maybe a little more angular. Instead of rubber bands - leatherette! (for me, this is a super mega plus, I read a lot about gum flying off after 6-12 months, about self-made methods of soaking them in gasoline for Zippo, etc.). And here the tabs are almost like those of Canon, yes, not rubber, but somehow calmer. An input for an external microphone (again, for recording an interview on video, the sound will be clear). Overall impression: pleasant, understandable, fast, intelligent device.