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Supplied Accessories

  • Rechargeable Li-ion Battery EN-EL5
  • AC Adapter EH-66
  • USB Cable UC-E6
  • Audio Video Cable EG-CP14
  • Strap AN-CP18
  • Software Suite CD-ROM

*Supplied accessories may differ depending on country or area.

COOLPIX P6000 4 5 27 27
really amazing picture clarity reliable cute and compact, hasslefree oporation,handy. December 15, 2011
Falls way below normal Nikon standards I have owned many Nikons over the years, and have always been satisfied. This camera, though, is the exception. It never properly did all it was said to be able to do. Worked slowly and poorly (eg, NEF). I would have sold it off, except I could not do so in good conscience. I realize that a small camera like this cannot be expected to do what my D300 does, but it should do what is advertised. Nikon really stumbled badly with this one. November 5, 2011
Rushed to market - not quite ready for primetime I bought this camera for my wife right after it was launched because of my positive experiences with the Nikon DSLR cameras, thinking that the mix of optics and features was exactly what I was looking for, as a gift for my wife. On the bright side: 1. The shutter lag is very short and the focus speed I have found to be quite good for a point-and-shoot (better than my D90 when using live view on it!) 2. The built in GPS allows to Geotag photos - really nice when doing a lot of travel photography. 3. Initially the battery life was dreadful, but after a firmware upgrade, the battery life is quite reasonable. Can do a full day of shooting outdoors with no trouble (200+ shots) 4. The dial-control model is quite familiar to me, although my wife does not care for it too much. Unfortunately the camera has some serious shortfalls: 1. The flash does not pop-up automatically when in full automatic mode. I would expect that the flash behaves the same as on my D90 - when in full Auto if the camera determines the flash is needed - pop-it up! 2. The GPS is really really really slow to acquire a signal, and if you forget to turn it off when you are not going to use the camera for a few days, you will come back to a dead battery - usually right when you are trying to get a quick picture! 3. We sometimes find it hard to tell the camera what to focus on and get a fair number of out of focus shots (granted it could be my wife's photography skills... but it is a point-and-shoot camera after all) Overall I have not been very happy with the camera, and am in the market for a replacement camera for my wife. April 14, 2011
Great camera for traveling I travel a lot and needed a good camera to take pictures of the sites. I've had others but decided to splurge on this because of the GPS capability. It takes fantastic day pictures. It is very good at sunrise and sunset. While it can take good pictures at night, you definitely need a tripod or a way to brace the camera. My one major beef is that the GPS takes forever to find out where it is if you go beyond 2 hours. There is no way to tell the camera to keep the location longer than that, so it has to recompute its location. If you travel and bring out the camera at your destination, it can take over 10 minutes to figure out where it is (even in broad open space). Once it does figure out where it is, then the geocoding is wonderful and really helps keep track of your travels, especially if you use iPhoto (or some other program that supports geotagging). Overall a great little camera with excellent picture quality. August 2, 2010
The 6000 CAN produce very acceptable images Right of the bat, this camera is extremely hard on batteries, carry at least 2 spares. Tele and Wide angle only work occasionally even on my 2nd, the first one was worse. Since the Tele. and Wide angle are motorized it is very hard to get the result you want, manual is much smoother, mind you, I am a little spoiled by my D300, Auto focus is acceptable but seems to hunt more than necessary. On full Telephoto the viewfinder gets blurred but the image turns out sharp August 1, 2010
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Industry Recognition

Backpacker Magazine

April 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000 | Backpacker Magazine

Backpacker Magazine awarded the Nikon COOLPIX P6000 with a 2009 Editors’ Choice Award. Backpacker’s staff stated that the P6000 was in a class of its own due to its built-in GPS unit and ability to capture crisp and color-rich photos with amazing clarity. Backpacker Magazine found the 2.7-inch LCD screen, full manual shooting modes, pop-up flash and the Optical and LCD Viewfinder helpful and versatile. Overall, the P6000 was declared the first affordable GPS-enabled digital camera for backpackers and hikers alike.

Popular Science

October 2008, Nikon COOLPIX P6000 | Will Safer

Will Safer of Popular Science recently reviewed the Nikon COOLPIX P6000. Safer was amazed with the P6000's GPS feature and its ability to add the latitudinal and longitudinal coordinates of the location where a picture was taken. Though some camera phones already come with GPS features, Safer stated that no camera phone packed the photo-taking abilities of the COOLPIX P6000. Safer later praised the P6000 because of its 13.5 megapixels, its 4x zoom lens and its low-light shooting up to ISO 6400 sensitivity.

PhotoInduced.com

January 19, 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000 | Damon Webster

Photo Induced’s Damon Webster said in his January review that the COOLPIX P6000 will provide any photographer with “excellent photographic results.” Taking this camera on an assignment to Paris, Webster noted the camera’s “smaller, lighter and more compact” size is a big plus while traveling. The in-camera GPS easily tracked where all Webster’s photos were taken for later reference. Webster concluded by saying “it did what we expected, in a nice compact, light package.”

New York Times

August 7, 2008, Nikon COOLPIX P6000 | John Biggs

New York Times tech reporter John Biggs was impressed with the newly launched Nikon COOLPIX P6000. Biggs claimed that travelers would enjoy the P6000's built-in GPS sensor and the ability to geo-tag photos while land lovers would take full advantage of the built-in Ethernet port. Biggs emphasized the P6000's rugged, magnesium alloy construction along with its 4x optical zoom lens, 13.5 megapixels and light sensitivity up to ISO 6400.

Digital Camera Resource Page

January 18, 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000 | Jeff Keller

DC Resource’s Jeff Keller was astounded by the COOLPIX P6000’s plethora of features in his January review. Keller noted that features such as geo-tagging and the picture bank, which takes full advantage of the Ethernet port, makes this camera an extraordinary buy and plenty “bang for the buck.” Keller also stated that the Optical VR image stabilization worked well at clearing image blur. Keller concluded by saying that even though the camera is geared toward the enthusiast, the COOLPIX P6000 has many features that even a beginner can appreciate.

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how does geotag work

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In principal .. it gets coordinates from the GPS unit attached to the camera, then saves them within the EXIF info with the pic file storing the location with the pic.
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Review

April 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000

by Backpacker Magazine

Backpacker Magazine awarded the Nikon COOLPIX P6000 with a 2009 Editors’ Choice Award. Backpacker’s staff stated that the P6000 was in a class of its own due to its built-in GPS unit and ability to capture crisp and color-rich photos with amazing clarity. Backpacker Magazine found the 2.7-inch LCD screen, full manual shooting modes, pop-up flash and the Optical and LCD Viewfinder helpful and versatile. Overall, the P6000 was declared the first affordable GPS-enabled digital camera for backpackers and hikers alike.

Close

Review

January 19, 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000

by Damon Webster

Photo Induced’s Damon Webster said in his January review that the COOLPIX P6000 will provide any photographer with “excellent photographic results.” Taking this camera on an assignment to Paris, Webster noted the camera’s “smaller, lighter and more compact” size is a big plus while traveling. The in-camera GPS easily tracked where all Webster’s photos were taken for later reference. Webster concluded by saying “it did what we expected, in a nice compact, light package.”

Close

Review

January 18, 2009, Nikon COOLPIX P6000

by Jeff Keller

DC Resource’s Jeff Keller was astounded by the COOLPIX P6000’s plethora of features in his January review. Keller noted that features such as geo-tagging and the picture bank, which takes full advantage of the Ethernet port, makes this camera an extraordinary buy and plenty “bang for the buck.” Keller also stated that the Optical VR image stabilization worked well at clearing image blur. Keller concluded by saying that even though the camera is geared toward the enthusiast, the COOLPIX P6000 has many features that even a beginner can appreciate.

Close

Review

October 2008, Nikon COOLPIX P6000

by Will Safer

Will Safer of Popular Science recently reviewed the Nikon COOLPIX P6000. Safer was amazed with the P6000's GPS feature and its ability to add the latitudinal and longitudinal coordinates of the location where a picture was taken. Though some camera phones already come with GPS features, Safer stated that no camera phone packed the photo-taking abilities of the COOLPIX P6000. Safer later praised the P6000 because of its 13.5 megapixels, its 4x zoom lens and its low-light shooting up to ISO 6400 sensitivity.

Close

Review

August 7, 2008, Nikon COOLPIX P6000

by John Biggs

New York Times tech reporter John Biggs was impressed with the newly launched Nikon COOLPIX P6000. Biggs claimed that travelers would enjoy the P6000's built-in GPS sensor and the ability to geo-tag photos while land lovers would take full advantage of the built-in Ethernet port. Biggs emphasized the P6000's rugged, magnesium alloy construction along with its 4x optical zoom lens, 13.5 megapixels and light sensitivity up to ISO 6400.