Posted on 12/21/2004 5:43:15 AM PST by RayChuang88
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP) - Millions of Americans who waited patiently for the quality and convenience to leap forward and the prices to roll back are now jumping on the digital-shutterbug bandwagon.
A novelty item just four or five years ago, the digital camera is shaping up as the most popular electronics gift in 2004, according to the Consumer Electronics Association. It was runner-up in 2003 to the DVD player, the No. 1 gift since 2000.
At age 75, Marilyn Smith discovered a wealth of reasons this holiday season to switch to a digital camera. Snapping away until she gets the right shot, without worrying about film, sounded enticing. So did packing a palm-size gadget on a baggage-laden trip to Hawaii in February. But she especially liked the idea of an image stabilizer that negates wobbles.
"Why? Because I sway very easily," the retired nurse's aide explained with a hearty laugh.
(Excerpt) Read more at apnews.myway.com ...
You have an old Canon model that has been discontinued for some time. I've played with the current PowerShot SD300 and that camera is ready to take pictures in 1.4 seconds, something I really like. The only thing is that the PowerShot SD300 sells for over US$360 street price.
Don't know if these would fit your needs, but Olympus offers:
Please note that although I own two Olympus cameras, I'm not affilated with them in any financial way!
I've seen the EOS Digital Rebel selling for under $700. Not bad if you already have a decent investment in EOS lenses.
You can even take night time pictures. Try that with a conventional film camera, unless you use special lenses. Its cool.
bttt.....good thread
I also have an OM-2 - the old fitted "leather" case is peeling - really sad. I recently had the camera repaired - the foam that provides a lightproof seal around the camera back was disintegrating.
It would be nice to use a classic SLR to take digital photos, and someone even thought of a way to accomplish it:
As far as I know, this drop-in unit never saw actual production. Clever design, though. Projected price and the rapid pace of viewfinder-type digicams' evolution prevented this product from seeing the light of day (no pun intended - well, okay, maybe a small one).
The idea is still being kicked around, though. The newest version of the prototype packs more megapixels and adds a motor drive-like attachment to the bottom of the SLR camera to provide a small LCD screen, more battery power and a Compactflash memory card slot. Have a look at the new version at SiliconFilm.com
At one point, I think I read something about Intel and Kodak owning the patents for this gizmo. Perhaps they're behind siliconfilm or its predecessor.
MSN provides a free personalized web site you can load your pics to so they can be shared. Check out www.msnusers.com/alaskapicsetc The pics are loaded from your pic program(XP home edtion).
I tried this for the first time last night with a target of opportunity when Santa came through the neighborhood on a firetruck. Handheld quick shot on night setting without a tripod. Didn't turn out due to shutter speed, of course, but I was favorablely impressed with the light sensitivity and color. I'm planning on trying under the right conditions over the Christmas break.
Thanks.
$0.14 at Costco.
ping
Just picked up the Nikon 8800.
Can the software. Just use it like a drive and copy/paste/delete as needed.
BUMP
I will be taking pictures of property and will use it for vacation pictures. What is the best buy with the best features under $300. I'd like zoom and ease of use.
That can be a nontrivial problem. During the Y2K mess, we had a contractor tell us an amazing tale of woe.
The printouts of the source code were on low-quality paper with a poor-quality printer ribbon (dot-matrix) that had deteriorated over the previous 30 years--unreadable.
Not to worry! They had the source code tapes...
And they discovered that (a) they didn't have the tape drives to read that format, and (b) no one knew who did.
Ironically, they found the very same drives that they'd used: they'd donated them to a computer museum. The museum had taken loving care of the mechanical components, so the drives would be sure to work...
Except that the contractor couldn't figure out how to interface them to their current systems and read the output. (The tape drives used a proprietary serial link interface instead of a commercial standard.)
They contacted the original manufacturer...
Who had no record of ever having made that model of tape drive--or ANY kind of tape drive.
They finally found a set of documentation for the interface at ANOTHER computer museum in another city, and got photocopies of the documentation. But it was an adventure.
I got my wife a Fuji E510 5MP for around $230 w/shipping from buydig.com. Ordered on a Sunday night, and it arrived Thursday morning.
Maybe it means something that one of my favorite things to photograp are phone booths?
Both pieces of vanishing Americana.
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