EDIT: Turns out I'm not quite there yet! (see replies below). This topic may need moving, though I'm not really sure where!
What a night I've had. A satellite went through my eyepiece FOV whilst I was attempting to drift align the eq6 and I saw my first fireball. Anyway, since I have had my eq6 (a week and one day) the sky has been getting brighter for me (not literally). It makes it so much easier for visual work! I havn't gotten then hang of alligning yet, one problem being because I don't have a very clear sky view to the south

Regardless, I've been practising and I hope I'll be up to getting some dso shots in soon enough.
Anyway, earlier tonight I came back to the computer to work on some assignments for school. Naturally I got bored and decided to jump on starry night to have a look for targets. Just for fun, I decided to have a look at Pluto and was pleased to see it was located basicly next to a mag 3.5 star. I thought "I wonder if I can image that?" so I drew a rough map of the location on a scrap of paper and went out. Took me a little while to find the mag 3.5 star cause of the full moon, but I did manage to track it down. I was very happy to see that Pluto was visable with the naked eye!! (Everything was right where it was supposed to be, I was quite amazed). So I threw my sony digicam in my home-made camera bracket thingy and got a few exposures before a huge bank of clouds came over.
Because I'm still learning when it comes to alligning, there are some star trails there. Also, my camera isn't the best quality (can someone give me their 350d or 20a for free?

) and its certainly reflected in the picture. Also, because of the 150kb limit for uploading here the quality is decreased even more. Now for the specs - I took it with my 10"GSO newt on a standard eq6 (badly alligned) with the standard 32mm bintel/gso eyepiece. I believe the pic I have chosen to post (the best one of the lot) was a 15-20sec exposure at 4 megapixels at ISO400.
Sorry for the long post!