Read the user guide
Water can damage a new Nikon camera, and this is not usually something that is covered under the warranty. If you store the camera in a damp place and it is ruined, you will have to buy a new one. This rule is in place to stop people from turning in cameras that they have dropped in the water, but it works for any sort of water damage that comes about. Do not take any chances.
By relying on a Nikon photo recovery software, you can retrieve deleted pictures provided that the pics not overwritten. So stop taking more photos using the same camera memory card.
Not really. You can buy an adapter that'll let you mount the lens on the body...but the lens won't autofocus, and the camera won't be able to control the f-stop on the lens so you'll have to focus wide open then stop down (and watch the picture get very dark) to meter.
Nothing to worry at all. The areas which are flashing is Nkon's way of telling you that the bright or highlights (flashing areas) are over exposed. When that happens, you just need to hold down the Exposure compansation button on the camera and rotate the thumbwheel one stop. That will solve it....:)
the pirates of the carribean 4 will stop showing in the theatre in July 20th
f-stop
When the f-stop of a camera increases in size the aperature also gets bigger
no it is still on
They wanted to.
Most do
The Hunger Games may never stop showing! Well, it will, but when it becomes a DVD it will. It will probably stop in July, in the three dollar theater. :3
It's used to increase the focal length of a lens. There are two types you can get a x1.4 and x2. If you place the x2 between the camera and a 300mm lens, then you end up with a 600mm lens - but it will cost you 2 stops of exposure, so the autofocus may well stop working.