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The Canon EOS 10D is a discontinued 6.3-megapixel semi-professional digital SLR camera, initially announced on 27 February 2003. It replaced the EOS D60, which is also a 6.3-megapixel digital SLR camera. It was succeeded by the EOS 20D in August 2004. Despite having an APS-C sensor, the 10D was introduced before EF-S lenses became available and was incompatible with them. The 10D was only able to mount EF lenses. All successive Canon Digital SLR cameras with APS-C sensors can mount EF-S lenses. The 10D captured RAW images in the Canon CRW file format, which is no longer used by Canon, although modern versions of Canon's Digital Photo Professional will read it. ==Compared to the D60== The 10D had the same 6.3-megapixel resolution as the D60, with an expanded ISO range. It also retained compatibility with the BG-ED3 battery grip, which had been introduced with the Canon EOS D30 and continued with the D60. There were however numerous changes: * 7-point AF system—up from EOS D60's 3-point AF system—that is more sensitive and covers a wider area * Magnesium alloy body * New button layout on top and back of camera * FAT32 support for CompactFlash cards larger than 2 GB in capacity * A new DIGIC image processor * Extended ISO film speed range of ISO 100 to ISO 1600, with ISO 3200 available upon activation of a custom function * Orientation sensor that automatically tags the orientation of the image during capture and subsequently rotates the image to the correct orientation during playback * Playback magnification up to 10x * 8 new languages in the Menu system * Flash strobes instead of a dedicated AF assist lamp 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Canon EOS 10D」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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