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Tips to buy a new digital camera? |
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| Dec11-11, 11:11 AM | #1 |
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Tips to buy a new digital camera?
I've a digital camera since 2005 and it started going bad maybe 1 or 2 years ago. Basically most of the time when I want to take a photo it turns automatically in filming mod. I have to wait/shake the camera in order for it to turn back to photo mod and that's pretty annoying; even more annoying if I have to take a quick photo. It's a Canon digital ixus 50.
When I had time to travel I liked to take landscapes and many other things. I like detailed photos so I guess that a 12 mega pixel camera would be awesome (vs the 5 of mine). Do you have a good/bad experience with a particular model? I don't want a professional camera, nor a cheap/basic one. Here are some photos I took. PS:I'm going to upload them with resizing, going to take some time. ![]() Uploaded with ImageShack.us That was in Peru in 2005, near Pachacamac's ruins in south of Lima. ![]() Buenos Aires in 2006. ![]() Uploaded with ImageShack.us Mendoza, Argentina in 2006. ![]() [/URL] At Iguazu falls in early 2007. ![]() Uploaded with ImageShack.us Ants eating common fig in Argentina. ![]() Uploaded with ImageShack.us Caen, France in early 2009. ![]() Uploaded with ImageShack.us Montréal, Canada in early 2011. |
| Dec11-11, 12:17 PM | #2 |
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Have you seen this thread?
http://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?t=464937 |
| Dec11-11, 12:20 PM | #3 |
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Andy Resnick wrote |
| Dec11-11, 01:12 PM | #4 |
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Tips to buy a new digital camera?
When we adopted a rambunctious shelter-dog, I found it inconvenient to drag around the Canon DSLRs on our walks. I ended up buying a Panasonic DMC-ZS3. Small enough to fit in a shirt pocket, with an aspheric Leica zoom lens (great macro performance!). I bought that camera after seeing some of Andre's shots. I can't make a real recommendation because I have not kept current with digital cameras, or compared them.
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| Dec11-11, 02:06 PM | #5 |
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For the non DSLR route, there are several decent point and shoot options, which have pixel counts in the 12Mp range. http://www.canon.ca/inetCA/subCatego...d=17&scatid=18 If I were to pick a camera for you to buy, I would suggest a Canon T3i, they're around $750 now and are quite good cameras, as long as you treat it right it would give you great, high resolution photos for years. |
| Dec11-11, 04:49 PM | #6 |
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Sure you get quality with entry level DSLR's, but I would not go for a brand straight away. Nikon, Pentax and Sony also have rather interesting models. It really depends on what you think you need and what your future desire is. A superzoom is an incredible toy but SLR's clearly beat them for poster size enlargements as well as for low light, due to the sensor size difference, then there is also the micro four thirds
Maybe browse around here a bit first. |
| Dec11-11, 06:13 PM | #7 |
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Ok guys thank you very much. I know what I'll do. I'll go to several stores and take note of the models that looks reasonable to me and then check out reviews on the Internet and eventually post here to get your feedback. Because buying from Internet here in Argentina isn't a good idea, much less for electronics (I think the tax is 100% of the value of the product for electronics; while it is 50% for books!).
But so far I must say that turbo's suggestion looks exactly what I could look for. I've checked out the Canon T3i and this is what I'd consider slightly too professional for the use I plan to do. Hmm I've just checked the price of PANASONIC DMC-FP5 (a model I can find here in stores) and it's much more expensive here in Argentina than what it looks on the Internet. 1800 pesos so about 420 dollars. On the Internet it's priced as low as 124 dollars on Amazon, this looks like a madness if I buy it in stores! So I might consider buying from the Internet. Anyway I'm going to check out the cameras in the next days and then post here with all the details. Edit: Nevermind guys. I just checked out the website of a common store in France and I can get much better cameras for much, much cheaper than here. I guess I'll wait 1 year to buy it, when I'll probably visit my French family. So I'll stick with what I've got for one more year. |
| Dec13-11, 12:45 PM | #8 |
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My $0.02 (0.08 pesos):
Think about what your needs/wants are. For example, my wife's #1 priority is uploading photos to Facebook/Ofoto/etc. I am buying her a Kodak Easyshare camera, since those cameras make that function as simple as possible. You mentioned travel; perhaps your #1 priority is a small lightweight camera that you can put in a pocket and not think about how to use. Cost is (usually) another very important priority, but is one that can direct you towards a 'sexy' camera that does not really meet your needs. Your strategy to narrow down the list and check online reviews is a good one, just remember to cross-check different review sites to eliminate bias. I would argue not to wait another year, especially if you are frustrated with the camera you have now. Why not purchase directly from the store in France, or arrange with your 'French family' to purchase the camera and mail it to you? |
| Dec13-11, 01:37 PM | #9 |
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| Dec13-11, 01:57 PM | #10 |
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I'm also reading horror stories of people in Argentina that bought product on the Internet, even from Amazon. I'm really not enthusiast in trying this. A friend of my girlfriend bought a laptop from a customers at half the price of what one can get in the USA. Basically the customers stole it and sold it to friends. This could happen with a digital camera; after all once my mother sent me several books and I never received them. |
| Dec17-11, 11:22 AM | #11 |
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My girlfriend is convincing me to buy a new camera.
I've seen several model in local stores but memorized only 1 that looked nice and cheap compared to others. Olympus x 940. I've read some reviews on the Internet and checked out the characteristics of the camera. Some bad reviews were that it takes awful photos, horrible auto focus, flash too bright and the likes. Personally I don't like to use flash so this isn't a problem. But about the quality of photo, it matters to me and so does the auto focus. I wonder if those reviews were from people that doesn't know how to use it or serious photographs. Another criterion I consider important for buying a new camera is the ISO. My current cam is "bad" in this sense. I can choose ISO 50 to 400. But with ISO 50 I must not move a iotta in order to get a non blurry picture. While on ISO 400 (the one I'm using the most), the quality of the picture is really lesser. In the Olympus x 940 I think the ISO can go as high as 1600, so that I'm guessing that ISO 400 is still good quality for that camera, but I don't find any info on how the quality of the photos are when the ISO increases for that camera. By the way its costs will be around 250 dollars (around 1100 pesos). |
| Dec17-11, 11:43 AM | #12 |
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It is so sad that your import duties are so high on products that are so useful. It's not like the duties are protecting any manufacturing jobs in your country. Is Argentina expecting to become a powerhouse in the production of high-end portable electronics? (A joke, but probably justified when considering such high tarrifs.)
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| Dec17-11, 11:55 AM | #13 |
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I don't know if they do this also with digital cameras but that's a possibility. |
| Dec17-11, 12:16 PM | #14 |
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In that prize range, I would advice one of the two winners here:
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/q311...zoomgrouptest/ My daugher went for the Nikon Coolpix S9100 for the speed but the Canon SX230HS is better at high ISO low light |
| Dec17-11, 05:05 PM | #15 |
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That would be a dream for me André to get either of those 2 cameras for this price!
I just went to a local Kodak store, here's the price of some models I saw: Olympus x 940: 1050 pesos (about 244$) (somehow good review online) Olympus FE-5030: 1200 pesos.(280$) (reviews doesn't look good on the Internet) Olympus x 43: 700 pesos.(163$) (reviews look horrible) Kodak M522: 1100 pesos.(256$) (good reviews) Kodak M532: 1200 pesos.(280$) (good reviews) Kodak M590: 1500 pesos.(350$) (good reviews) Samsung PL20: 1100 pesos.(256$) (very good reviews) Samsung PL120: 1500 pesos.(350$) (also very good reviews in general but the price is very high!) Kodak C1530: 650 pesos.(150$) (good to very good reviews) Most of these cameras have similar properties like number of mega pixels (12 to 14 I think), optical zoom between 3 to 5x. However the prices are quite different and I don't understand why. Is it worth to jump on the opportunity to buy the Kodak C1530 considering it's much cheaper than the others? Or the Samsung PL20 is definitely better in terms of picture quality? Can I adjust the ISO as I like for each one of these cameras? Because I don't like the auto ISO of my current camera and I fear I will also dislike the one of any of these cameras. Edit: I forgot to mention another important factor to me: I prefer rechargeable batteries (that you plug into house current system) rather than common AA batteries. This eliminate at least the cheap (but looked amazing) Kodak C1530... |
| Dec17-11, 07:55 PM | #16 |
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FWIW I got a Nikon Coolpix S4 a few years back (sold in "factory refurbished" condition and bought it on Ebay, though ironically the seller was a large camera store about 15 miles from where I live!)
The S4 is 6 MPixel, max speed 400 ASA, 10x optical zoom (plus a 4x digital zoom, which IS just a gimmick). The design is very nice for a pocket camera, because the zoom lens and sensor are in a "barrel" attached to one end of the camera body that rotates through 270 degrees, and in the "storage" position (pointing up) the camera is a neat rectangular block shape rather than the usual "lens sticking out of the front". The rotating lens isn't just a gimmick - I sometimes use my car as a hide for wildlife photography, and its handy to be able to shoot at strange angles through an open window or the sunroof and still see the viewfinder screen. If they bring out a new model with that feature, and the same general spec as the S9100, I would be tempted to upgrade. My only real criticism of the S4 is that the autofocus is a bit temperamental, though I've "tamed" it by experimenting with ALL the preset options for landscape, portraits, closeups, etc and learning the differences in how they work. But that can still involve missing a shot while messing around with the menus to get to the right option. I very rarely use it in "default point and shoot mode". |
| Dec18-11, 03:48 AM | #17 |
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