

Show horizon in program, not just camera.You can also line up a 3D rendering that the art director has prepared Line up a semi-transparent prior photo to line up your current shot, again CP1 has it.Dual live view, meaning the entire image PLUS a 100% zoom in another window, CP1 has this.At least in my case, both a fast enough for my needs. Makes me believe that pokey is more hardware related than software. I noted that CCP2 on my 2012 MBP (usb2) with a D750 has more pokey than CCP2 on my 2018 MBP (usb3) with a D850. Live View returning after taking a photo is pokey. The refresh rate on the Live View is pokey. You are right! I was thinking about CPP2 LV as that is what I use most for macro, still life, and portraits. You should be able to use the camera as long as you're not in Live View, at least that's how it works with the D800 and D850. I don't do video, so can't be sure if it lacks features for video. Also not sure what features are missing, but for me it controls the camera, downloads as I want, and displays images on the laptop. Not sure what you mean by pokey, but if it is download speed, I have noticed that with one of my laptops (usb2), it is much slower than another laptop with usb3. With 3rd party software, you usually have to wait weeks if a new camera firmware breaks it. I use CCP2 as well, it's not full featured and pokey, but it always gets the job done. I tried a few, but keep coming back to CCP2. Surely other software tether packages have the same capabilities. When I use CCP2 and a tethered D750, I usually set ViewNX-i as the app to view the jpg or raw file.

You can't manually use the D750, you have to use CCP2 to take your shots. Nikon's Capture Control Pro 2 (CCP2) can save to both PC and cards, but it takes control of the D750 when used with a tether usb cable. I just want to tether with a cable to my laptop and be able to save images to both the laptop and in camera card. I've also used qdslr dash on Android and Windows via Wifi, again, can view what's on camera and download it to the computer as needed - but I guess you want this all to be happening in the background? Reality is that the wifi connection, particularly for the bigger files sizes, is simply not that quick, maybe 3-4 seconds per image. Well, even the lowly wmu is able to wirelessly download captures as you go - but you may not like the frame rate, nor the reliance on LV.
