
I suppose if you are doing studio work and want to work from your computer or have others view it as you work it is ok. We all shoot different and what works for does not mean it will work for someone else! Try some other programs if they have trial periods and see what works best for you. If you have Lightroom, try shooting with your camera tethered, if you don't have it, download the software and try it for 30 days. Maybe others will join in this thread and give you other suggestions and recommendations. There are other 3rd party programs out there you can use, but I have no experience, other than what some fellow photographers I know told me about and I did not like what i heard. With my cameras, unless I've missed something the last few years, you can not record to the computer and camera when shooting tethered, only to the folder you set up on your computer. I use it on a MAC with OS X 10.7.5 and on a Windows 7, with a Nikon D800, D700 and D300S all with no problems. You also would have to check if your Nikon DSLR is supported by the software, and if you computer's OS is capable of running it. For ME that's important and worth the $179.00, for others it may not.
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However, the cost of Lightroom is cheaper than the cost of Camera Control Pro 2, and you get the benefits of the rest of the software's features.Ģnd Camera Control Pro 2, allows you just about full functionality of your cameras control through the computer. For some people that's no big deal, for me once I have my camera set to record what ever I'm recording I don't like to touch it physically - i.e. You have to manually adjust your shutter, aperture, ISO etc all through the camera's controls. Also you cannot adjust your camera's settings through the software. Why?ġst Lightroom, for me, is a little more complicated to set up versus Nikon's.

What I can say is that for me I prefer Nikon's. Hi Randy can't say which is the best tethering software as I've only tried two, Lightroom and Nikon's Camera Control Pro 2.
