I don't know if your comment was a followup to Roland's or mine. However, to be clear, I certainly wasn't making any excuses for the D100. And coming off a thirty year engagement with all-things Nikon professional at the time of my first digital camera -- the aforementioned D100 -- it was quite an experience, say let-down, for me. At least, initially so. It was a valuable tool for me on which to learn -- or hope to endeavor to -- all things digital. Incidentally, I have rarely owned a new Nikon-anything, owing to the plethora of excellent used equipment in New York City, and certainly couldn't have justified the expenditure for a D100 at its time of launch, even if I could've afforded to which, frankly, I couldn't. As for the N80: No thanks! (Although I have often considered one for a display piece along side a D100.) However, and to the credit of its enduring architecture, many good cameras were built on its stellar frame. And one would have been hard pressed during the film age to get me to accept any camera that required a battery to be minimally functional. It took an F4 to bring me to a place in my mind where I could even begin to accept the fact that most environments I generally found myself had AA batteries available. (I always packed my F2, just in case... ) D70? I chose a used D100, at pennies on the dollar, over a D70. I eschew "camera cults", then as now, and wasn't easily swayed by the D70's incremental merits over its predecessor. What the D100 lacked, I made up for with experience. (And I used the money saved to buy a used Nikkor 35-70mm f2.8D for $33.00 on eBay! Yes, it was quite a stroke of luck and good timing.) That, and I revile "pentamirrors".