Well, then you should try some recent Canons with the Digic-II-processor.And manual controls are good even if you don't use them very often. You don't need use them.
I'm looking for a new digital camera. I want one with good quality shots, slim, and that uses rechargable batteries (my current camera goes through AA's left and right). Hopefully I can use this to guide my buying decisions...
"High-Quality Photos on Even a Meager Budget""You don't have to drop a load of money for a camera..."Nope, it doesn't mention low cost anywhere in the article.
Thanks for posting - some really good info. Some not so... If your looking for more advice on buying a camera please feel free to ask on www.talkmicro.com You may even end up learning how to make some cash from your photos :)
<a class="user" href="http://cexx.org/dakota">http://cexx.org/dakota</a> is a nice starting place if anyone wants to look into the disposables. I'm actually using the Dakota now while I shop for a new camera. Only 1.3MP, no screen, and anything closer than 4 feet is blurry, but for a $10 camera it takes pretty decent pictures.
I'm actually leaning towards the Samsung Digimax A402, best combination I've seen so far of price, size, resolution, and intended use. Everything else I've seen I consider "huge." (For perpective, my old cam is a Sony Cybershot U50 which is the size of a candy bar.)
Closed AccountApr 17, 2006
Well, then you should try some recent Canons with the Digic-II-processor.And manual controls are good even if you don't use them very often. You don't need use them.
alej744Apr 17, 2006
yeah
codymanApr 17, 2006
I'm looking for a new digital camera. I want one with good quality shots, slim, and that uses rechargable batteries (my current camera goes through AA's left and right). Hopefully I can use this to guide my buying decisions...
nailpuppyApr 17, 2006
"High-Quality Photos on Even a Meager Budget""You don't have to drop a load of money for a camera..."Nope, it doesn't mention low cost anywhere in the article.
talkmicroApr 17, 2006
Thanks for posting - some really good info. Some not so... If your looking for more advice on buying a camera please feel free to ask on www.talkmicro.com You may even end up learning how to make some cash from your photos :)
brhad56Apr 17, 2006
And it's also a 3.2 MP camera.
ggkoApr 18, 2006
<a class="user" href="http://cexx.org/dakota">http://cexx.org/dakota</a> is a nice starting place if anyone wants to look into the disposables. I'm actually using the Dakota now while I shop for a new camera. Only 1.3MP, no screen, and anything closer than 4 feet is blurry, but for a $10 camera it takes pretty decent pictures.
ggkoApr 18, 2006
I'm actually leaning towards the Samsung Digimax A402, best combination I've seen so far of price, size, resolution, and intended use. Everything else I've seen I consider "huge." (For perpective, my old cam is a Sony Cybershot U50 which is the size of a candy bar.)
ggkoApr 18, 2006
DXG? I hope it's just a bad LCD that they use, since I futzed with one at the store once and the pictures looked like crap.