After giving the OP the benefit of the doubt, I too think he is just trolling. If the stuck pixels keep showing up in every photo, he MUST be taking pix of the inside of the lens cap. Sad. Send the camera off to to a deserving firefighter who lost his at sea.
Umm. I am definitely not trolling. This is a real issue and it's really bothering me. Goodness, I'm just trying to get help! I can see the stuck pixels when I look in live view, when I connect my camera to HDMI in live view, in every photo. What is with people saying I am trolling. Man...
CameraTester wrote:
Umm. I am definitely not trolling. This is a real issue and it's really bothering me. Goodness, I'm just trying to get help! I can see the stuck pixels when I look in live view, when I connect my camera to HDMI in live view, in every photo. What is with people saying I am trolling. Man...
I just need help!
Nobody is disagreeing that you need help.
The world is not so interested in a few bad pixels in a cheap DLSR. It is just not important in the grand scheme of things. Complaining about trivial inconveniences can be irritating to others and will not be healthy for you in the long run. The technical answers have been presented clearly so I won't rehash them. As Henly and Frey said, "Get Over It."
All I wanted was just to get rid of them. I was wondering if there is any software to map them out, like a sensor remapping software I can use. Or any trick to remove them. Does anyone know of a way to do this?
CameraTester wrote:
All I wanted was just to get rid of them. I was wondering if there is any software to map them out, like a sensor remapping software I can use. Or any trick to remove them. Does anyone know of a way to do this?
Your questions have been thoroughly answered in this thread. But here goes again. NO. There is no way to map pixels out at home for SOOC files. If you shoot RAW and convert the NEF files with Adobe LR or ACR, it will be taken care of in conversion. If you prefer to shoot JPEG only then you'll have to clone out the spots in post or send the body to Nikon for remapping.