Home |
Contact Us |
Site Map |
News
ALL HANDHELDS.COM:
Your #1 source for PDAs, Cell Phones, Digital Cameras, MP3s and Pocket PCs!
Getting the Right Digital Camera For You
by Chris Thomas
There are really great advantages in digital photography:
You can shoot till you drop:
Taking digital images on your camera has no implication other
then you have captured the image. Then you can review each image
on the small screen on the back of your camera. You can shoot as
many pictures of the same scene as you like store them in
memory delete the ones that you do not like and print the
one(s) you like.
Each image is a winner:
Alternatively you can put an image up on a computer screen or
email it to all you friends can black mail be this easy?
Print at home or in a lab:
You can print your image at home on a photo printer turn your
image into a greeting card, calendar, or a whole other list of
photo memorabilia. Or hand over the job to the professionals.
So what digital camera should I buy?
A question we are often asked is what sort of camera should I
buy? There are literally hundreds of different models available
from a large number of well known manufacturers.
This is a difficult question, which might be answered in a
complex way. Rather, here we have tried to emphasise the salient
points and assist you in your decision.
Key components of the camera, which will influence your buying
decision will include: What do I want to use the camera for? How
big an image can I print? Does the camera have a zoom? What size
and weight is the camera?
How big an image can I print?
If your objective is to take a camera on holiday, take it onto
the beach and up a mountain and to print memorable images of
your time on 6 x 4 inch prints, then do not spend a lot of money
on your camera. A small compact camera with an image resolution
of 2 or 3 Mega Pixels will be adequate for your needs and should
you drop the camera or get sand in its workings then you will be
pleased that you did not spend too much money. More serious
photographers will want to make bigger pints or selectively
enlarge. They will want a higher image resolution and will
benefit from a zoom lens. So what is this MegaPixel thing?
Well it is the image size quality taken by the camera. The
higher the number the better the quality and the larger the
prints which can be made.
(Continued below)
Also See:
Product Review on Maxxum D70 Digital Camera
A Closer Look at Image Resolution
Does the camera have a zoom?
In past times zoom lenses were regarded as second best because
of their distortion and fogging. This is no longer the case
zoom lenses are truly brilliant. 3 x zooms are common and 6 x
zooms feature on the more expensive cameras. So you can have a
single lens which covers both wide angle views and provides a
short telephoto. All very usefully packaged in a lightweight
camera.
Beware of Digital Zoom. This is a technique, which zooms in on a
portion of the image by processing the picture and interpolating
the image between pixels a technique which always produces
inferior results.
What is the size and weight of the camera?
Digital cameras do not have to be bulky or heavy. Indeed there
are some very small models available, which will fit inside a
handbag. However the more sophisticated gear tends to be bulkier
and heavier. Professional models with interchangeable lenses
and external flash guns will require their own hold all.
Making the Right Selection:
There is a fantastic range of digital cameras available on the
market. Nonetheless manufacturers focus on their customers and
target specific models at certain sectors of the market. The
table below summarises the information, which we have discussed.
Basic camera:
A fixed lens camera priced at less than £50 [Or $90 USD] which
takes digital images of up to 1 MegaPixel - will be adequate for
computer or television screen display.
Party Camera:
A compact design camera with a fixed lens cost up to £150 [Or
$280 USD] - taking images of up to 2 MegaPixel - will generate
good quality images suitable for printing up to 4 x 5 inches
Holiday Camera:
Another compact design but with a 2 1 zoom lens and costing
between £200 and £400 [$350 - $800 USD] taking images or between
3 and 5 MegaPixel which will be suitable for printing up to 10 x
8 inches
Serious Camera:
A SLR style camera with a 5 1 zoom lens costing between £600
and £1000 [$1000 - $2000 USD] and producing images of up to 6
MegaPixel which will produce prints of up to 12 x 16 inches
Professional Camera:
An SLR camera with interchangeable lenses and costing upwards of
£1,500 [Or around $3000 USD], which will take images of up to 8
MegaPixel, which will print to poster size.
SLR stands for Single Lens Reflex. These are cameras, which do
not have a separate viewfinder. Rather the operator looks
through the lens of the camera. Momentarily before the shutter
is opened a mirror flicks up and the light passing through the
lens is allowed to hit the sensitive surface of the camera. In
many cases the lens at the front of the camera can be changed
for another type. A variation on this presents the image as seen
by the camera in a digital liquid crystal display either on the
back of the camera or through a viewfinder.
Flash:
Many of the inexpensive cameras will have on board flash
remember that these will only work up to about 10 feet, and
they might produce red eye. More expensive cameras will expect
the user to use an independent external flashgun.
Camera Accessories:
Most digital cameras come with interface cables and PC software
bundled. So if you have a PC at home or work you can download
images from your camera to your PC, do basic editing such as
removing red eye and delete the images you do not want! Your
valued images you can store for future generations on CD Rom or
another recording medium.
Digital Memory Media:
Sometimes known as Smart Card, Compact Flash, Multi Media Card,
Memory Stick. These are the memory chips on which your images
are stored some people refer to them as digital film. The
larger the capacity of the media, the more images it can store.
So buy one larger then you need for now. Images can be deleted
from the media but back them up on a CD Rom or DVD before you
erase the card.
Final Hint Keep lots of batteries handy. Digital cameras use a
lot of power!
About the author:
Christopher Thomas is both keen photographer and company
director of Viewlink Ltd based in Amersham, Uk. The company
provides digital photo developing for both amateur and
commercial photographers. For more articles by Christopher
Thomas please visit the company website at
http://www.view-link.com/photogifts.html
For articles on PDAs as well as iPaqs, Palm Pilots, iPods and more - be sure to visit the
Handhelds Article Archive
Please feel free to contact us anytime:
feedback@allhandhelds.com
Electronics Newsfeed
©2005 All Handhelds.com | Home | Site Map | About | Contact | Articles | WWW | Shop