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Cameras, Editor's Picks, Reviews, Digital Camera

What's the Best Digital SLR Camera for Beginners?


Question: I see more and more people carrying digital SLRs these days. And when I look at the great photos, I understand why. I'd like to upgrade from my point-and-shoot, but the choices are overwhelming. What's a good beginner SLR that can also grow with me if I want to get more serious?

Advice: Our current favorite among beginner models is the Nikon D5000. It's not the cheapest -- even from Nikon -- but it has great room to grow. The D5000 is very similar to the company's pricier D90 camera and comes with one significant upgrade: An articulating, 2.7-inch LCD screen allows you to frame the photo while holding the camera above your head, down at your waist, or even facing towards you for a self-portrait. That gives it a leg up on Canon's Digital Rebel line of entry-level SLRs.

The LCD is especially handy when using the D5000's video-capture feature, since you don't have to hold the camera right up to your nose while shooting. The 720p HD movies it takes don't match the crisp images you can get with a dedicated high-def camcorder, but they make a fun supplement to the excellent 12-megapixel still photos.

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Cameras, Digital Camera

Nikon Announces 8 New COOLPIX Digicams for the Spring



Lots of compact camera news today. Nikon announced eight new COOLPIX digicams, ranging from several pocket-friendly compact point-and-shoot cams to larger shooters featuring optical zooms up to 24x. We've got 4 new ones from the S-series, 3 from the L-series, and one P-series.

Highlights? Colors are big this year, and you'll see many of the models available in multiple colors, ranging from Royal Purple to Titanium Silver. The extreme-budget-priced L19 retails for only $109.95, and we liked the curved, hand-friendly case design of the S630. Lots of models, specs, and images, so check out our rundown after the break:


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Cameras, Home Video, Summer Fun

Nikon D90 Is First SLR to Shoot Video (and HD Video, at That)


So, Nikon finally fessed up to its new D90 prosumer DSLR, which means all that's left for us is to do is to pick through the spec sheets, drool on the product shots and imagine ourselves taking the film industry by storm with that D90-shot indie flick we're plotting.
INT. SUBURBAN HOME - DAY

BLOGGER sits at his computer typing. He looks inspired, witty, unkempt. The camera's short depth of field captures the writer in his element.
Oh, right, the tech specs:
  • New 12.3 megapixel Nikon DX-format CMOS image sensor with Integrated Dust Reduction System.
  • Low-noise from ISO 200 to 3200, ISO 6400 available.
  • D-Movie mode records in 320 x 216, 640 x 424 or 1,280 x 720 in AVI format.
  • Scene Recognition System based on 420 pixel RGB sensor for improved autofocus, autofocus and auto white balance, in addition to Face Detection.
  • Multi-CAM 1000 autofocus with 11 AF points.
  • 3-inch, VGA Live View LCD.
  • 4.5 fps continuous shooting, 0.15 second startup, 65ms shutter release lag.
  • SD / SDHC storage.
  • HDMI output
  • 5.2 x 4.1 x 3.0-inches.
  • 1 pound 6 ounces without battery.
  • $1,299 kit price.

Read - Nikon D90
Read - D90's "D-Movie" samples
Read - D90 tested out by Chase Jarvis

Cameras, Computers

Camera Store Offers Shopper $75 to Remove Bad Amazon Review

Shopper Leaves Bad Amazon Review, Shop Offers $75 To RemoveWoe betide the online camera shopper. Those who have an affinity for expensive photo gear know that they can save a bundle online. But, doing so often means dealing with shady, NYC-based camera shops that would just as soon spew profanity at you on the phone as listen to your complaints. This is the trap that shopper and blogger Jason Weisberger fell into when ordering a new, $5,000 Nikon D3 from an Amazon-affiliated retailer, Cameta Camera. He didn't like the store's service and left it a bad review, which resulted in Cameta Camera seemingly offering him a bribe to remove the negative feedback!

Weisberger had paid a whopping $75 in shipping to get the camera delivered and found that the seller had simply thrown the camera's box into a larger box, with no extra packing, and sent it on its way. The outer box was thoroughly trashed during shipment but somehow the camera inside didn't receive any damage. Weisberger called to express his disappointment and, after getting treated rudely over the phone, left the negative feedback at Amazon.

The next day he received a very apologetic e-mail offering to refund the $75 shipping charge he received, on one condition -- that he remove that negative review. By Weisberger's account, that's bribery. Even so, the company in question makes a valid point, that often retailers rectify customer complaints but the customers in question don't then go back and update their reviews.

What's your take, an honest shop trying to protect its reputation, or a sleazy retailer trying to bribe its way to good reviews? At least they didn't sue him ... [Source: Dethroner, via BoingBoing]

Cameras

Nikon Debuts Slim, Wi-Fi-friendly Fashion Camera


Nikon is fleshing out its "Style Series" of shooters with the COOLPIX S52 and S52c (pictured) compact cameras. The two cameras are pretty much spec-for-spec identical, other than the Wi-Fi capabilities of the S52c, which allow it to upload shots wirelessly to services like Flickr or Nikon's own "my Picturetown." Otherwise, you're looking at a pair of fairly standard compacts, with 9-megapixel sensors, 3x zoom, optical image stabilization and so forth.

Both will be available in May, with the S52 retailing for $250, and the S52c arriving at $280.



From Engadget

Cameras

Olympus' New E3 for High-End Shooters

Olympus' New E3 for High-End Shooters

If you're anything like us, you're hands are a little shaky, thanks to years of manic video game sessions and text-messaging away on tiny keypads. If you're also a serious photographer, though, you're in luck, since Olympus' new top-tier digital SLR camera has some integrated technology that's aimed at those with shaky hands. The new Olympus E3 is the latest "prosumer" entry from Olympus, meaning it's a camera ostensibly good enough for professionals, but easy enough to use and priced at a point where some serious amateur shooters can swing.

Mind you, when we say serious, we mean someone willing to spend $1,699 on a camera without a lens! That's the estimated street price on this thing when it drops in November.

For that price, you'll get just the E3 itself, a 10-megapixel SLR camera body. SLR (single-lens reflex) technically means that the viewport looks directly through the glass of the lens, but in the world of digital cameras it generally means a shooter that has swappable lenses. So, yes, your $1,699 camera won't be any good without some equally expensive glass on the end, but the E3 itself will deliver one feature typically only found in high-end SLR lenses: image stabilization (IS). IS means compensation for your shaky hands to produce a blur-free image, and the E3 has it built right in. This means all of its lenses can compensate for a little unintentional twitch. Most comparable SLRs, like those from Canon and Nikon, require that you buy higher-end IS lenses ... or carry around a tripod or monopod wherever you go.

Interestingly, the E3 also supports both the traditional CompactFlash style memory card, the standard for most SLRs, and the smaller xD-style card Olympus has been pushing. However, given that xD cards currently top out at just two-gigabytes (GB), you'll probably want to stick with the larger capacity CompactFlash cards on which to store the huge 10-megapixel images this camera takes. That is, unless you like swapping memory cards.

The E3 also sports a 2.5'-inch, dual-axis swivel LCD on the back, which you can pivot around at any angle, and auto-focus speeds said to be the fastest in the world when combined with the ED 12-60mm f2.8-4.0 lens from Zuiko Digital -- which will set you back another $1,000.

The $1,699 price without lens will likely scare away many amateurs, but the overall E3 package offers those serious shooters another choice between the other go-to cameras in this price range, the Canon EOS 40D and the Nikon D300. As we all know, gadget competition is a good thing for shoppers, whether they be prosumers or just plain 'ol amatuers.

Gallery: Olympus E3



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