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Digital Camera Recommendations...

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<< Walked in to Best Buy and noticed their prices are full retail ... ridiculous. $399 for a DX3900 with no dock or anything. WTF are they fooling? >>

Why're you complaining? Those big retailers always sell stuff at MSRP, unless it's a on-sale item.
 
i wouldn't want a sony just based on principles.. why'd they have to go and introduce the memory stick? and cdrw cameras??? floppy based ones?? ugh... their latest stuff is pretty decent tho.

Canon G2 or Olympus 4040z are my choices.. leaning towards the oly cause of the 1.8 lens and that it uses regular AA's. Unfortunately, quite expensive so i'm waiting till have a little money to blow and when it drops down a bit (yeah, i'll be waiting a while...)
 
Ok, I've gotten lots of great recommendations. I even looked at that Sony. It's sleek and nice looking, but at $515 ... and those Memory Sticks aren't very cheap at all. Especially the 128MB ones. I can get 128MB CF much cheaper, and use it with my other devices.

I'm still trying to narrow it down. There's just so many to choose from.

What's the biggest bang for the buck? 😀
 
I have the s100 and LOVE it. The main reason why I got it was for size and convenience.. I carry this thing EVERYWHERE.. because it is so portable. Even w/ the case on it, I can take it everywhere.. I have an extra battery, a 256 mb card, etc. I would recommend the s110 that is out now. Size is such a HUGE convenience.. otherwise if it's not a concern, you might as well get a digicam for $500+ or so.
 
blah, i didn't read your post enough 😛

anyway, i think you should go for a 3x optical.. i had my taste of 2x.. and it wasn't enough.

btw, you mentioned that you don't want the lcd to hit your nose when "focusing." There isn't a digital camera under $1500 that focuses thru the optical viewfinder... you do it thru the LCD 😛 But i know what you're getting at... i say if you can, when you narrow down your choices, go to ritz/best buy/compusa/local camera shop.. and test it out.
 
Have you seen Kodak DC4800? It's 3.1 MP Digital Camera with an excellent output and excellent feature set. I personally would highly recommend one to anyone.
 
I've heard some bad things about the DC4800, but I've been looking at the DX3900... seems to be pretty nice for the price. I just don't agree with paying an extra $75 for the damn docking cradle. Also, I guess the battery door is rather cheap and likely to break with repetitive use. At any rate, it seems to be a nice 3-odd MP camera for just over $300.
 
I'm in the same boat as you, I don't want a Sony, and Canons seem too expensive for me. I've been doing alot of research, and I've come down to the Fuji 6900 Zoom, or the Nikon 995. I can't decide either, I would DEFINTELY get the 995 if it didn't have that the swivel body, but I hate that even though it takes great pictures, so I'm torn right now. Alot of research has narrowed it down to those two.
 
How about the Nikon Coolpix 885, it has 3.2 megapixal 3x Zoom
I have the Coolpix 775, bought it before the 885 came out, it has 2.1 megapixal, I can do 8x10's with it at 1600x1200 res.
The 885 will do 8x10's much better than the 775
Overall very peased, but no manual adjustments.
The 995 has manual adjustments and will do 8x10's no problem.
I like the small size of the 775 and 885 as it fits nicely on my belt with it's small case.
 
abaez,

I was pretty leery of the nikon's swivel body before I bought my 990. As it turns out it really isn't much of an issue (the camera is nice and easy to grip in its native confirmation).

To my surprise, it has turned out to be a huge advantage in taking macro shots (tight places, odd angles. etc). And the macro capabilities of the Nikon 950/990/995 are nothing short of mind-blowing. I never thought I would care until I started playing with it and now I am hooked!

FWIW,

fraz
 
Nikon
Canon
Olympus
Sony

The downside to Sony is the memory stick, which costs 60% than either CF or SM cards of the same capacity. The CD Mavicas are IMO overpriced(799 for a 2.1 megapixel), you are basically paying $400 for the ability to use a CD. Also, DO NOT buy a P series Sony! They don't come with the Li-Ion battery and they only use 2 AA batteries at a time otherwise(10 minutes off alkaline, 1 hour of NiMH batteries). It ends up costing $200 moreish to get a Sony when you add up all the other little accesories like memory card readers.

Olympus is fine for everything under 4 megapixels. After that, the Smartmedia card becomes a little bit of a bottleneck as the biggest card will only give you about 30 pictures. Smartmedia will almost definately be around for a while longer, but I think that digital cameras will be moving toward CF more.

Canon and Nikon are both awesome, with a few caveats. The Nikon 885 does NOT come with the Li-ION battery or the charger. Nikon wants like $100 for it on their website. Otherwise this is an awesoem 3 megapixel camera, just keep that extra 100 in mind. The cannon G series is possibly the best consumer digital camera on the market. The S series has been looking good so far, though the battery is smaller, and as far as I know, not used by any other product(maybe the Elura digital camcorder uses it). This might make extra batteries harder to find, as I haven't seen them at Best Buy yet. The G series battery is also used by most of the Canon digital camcorders, and is a little easier to find.

PM me if you have any more questions.
 
I'm really, really leaning towards the DX3900... Someone stop me before I press "Finish Order" 😀

I've looked at the cameras in the similiar price range and it doesn't look good... the others are mostly 2.x MPs, and, I've heard from quite a few users that it's a great camera. I'm figuring what the hell... If it doesn't suit me, I can always resell it.
 
I'd say the Nikkon Coolpix 775. It's a very nice one with a lot of functions !
My bro bought it and I love it ! It's very small too! For 800$ Canadian he got the camera, 64Mb flash card and an adaptor where you could put the flash card in to connect directly to your comp via USB.
Go with that one
 
Well, here's a classic annoyance factor with digital cameras....shutter lag.

I don't know how the Kodak 3900 measures up on that account, but I would ask either the folks who have previously suggested the camera to you or head over to the Kodak Forum at DPreview here . .

There is tons of variation between the different manufacturers and I can guarantee that you will feel like pitching the thing if it is too long.

regards,

fraz
 
I've just got the Kodak DX3500. The docking station is not necessary, although I bought it for convenience. The main reason for the docking station is for ease of transfer and recharging batteries. The pictures turn out nice and crisp. It is a pretty good camera. Enjoy whatever you get.
 
frazzled wrote:

"There is tons of variation between the different manufacturers and I can guarantee that you will feel like pitching the thing if it is too long."

Yep, that should have been on my list as well 😀 I don't want a camera where I have to wait 30 seconds before snapping another shot. I suspect part of it also has to do with the CF media and how fast it is, although I'm not sure how much of an effect that really has on the shutter speed.

dpreview seemed to like the DX3900, and the user reviews seemed very good as well.
 
I have been selling these cameras for about 18 months now, and I can definately say to avoid the current Kodaks like the plague. Cheap lenses are the main culprit, the kodaks are all plastic, besides just not being great quality to begin with. That is the main reason why the price is so much cheaper than other brands. I think that the lens quality is actually a little more imprtant than having extreme resolution. You would probably be better off getting a 2.1 megapixel Canon, Olympus, or Nikon. Keep in mind, the autofocus as well as overall sharpness is controlled by that lens. Also, the Kodaks only use 2 AA batteries. That gives you at best maybe an hour with rechargeable NiMH batteries. The camera dock is very overrated, its $80 and performs the same functions as a $30 USB reader and a $25 battery charger kit. Their LCD's tend to look a little too washed out, which isn't helpful when you are trying to see if your lighting is adequate for your photo. In my department, we call the Kodaks disposable digital cameras, you buy them to fool around with, then buy something better in a year or two. It does kinda make sense when you consider that kodak makes all their money from their film business. Word in the channel is that Kodak will be introducing a disposable memory card that their new cameras will be using in the next year. HP is a little better, mainly as they do use 4 AA batteries, otherwise lens quality is about the same as the Kodaks. I haven't dealt with the current crop of Fuji's, so my info about them is a year outdated, but they used to have a VERY high return rate. Some people have said good things about them, so maybe the have improved.

Anyway, thats just my 2 cents
 
Also, in response to your concern about recycle time, their will always be some delay between pictures. Especially with 3.1 megapixel and above resolutions. The CF card does become a large bottleneck. Their are 3 ways to somewhat alleviate this however.

1. Buy a camera with a SRAM buffer.(A few models come to mind like the Sonydsc85 and toshiba PDR-m81, though I'm sure all the higer end models have something similar) This will usually allow you to snap off around 8MB worth of pictures before it need to dl them to the card. Keep in mind that at 3 megapixels, the files are ~2MBs apiece.

2. Buy faster memory cards. Check out Sandisks new Ultra CF type 1 cards. They have a 2.8 MB/s transfer rate, opposed to the 1.4MB/s transfer of the standard cards. They are a little more expensive, but ordering them off sandisk's website should keep the price down some.

3. Shoot pictures at smaller resolutions. Not much of a solution, but realistically, you very rarely need to take your pics at 3 megapixels. A decent 2.1 megapixel image will look good at a 5x7 print size. Also, when you buy a higher end camera, you do get better parts, like lenses, etc. A 3.1 megapixel camera will look better shooting 2.1 megapixels than a 2.1 megapixel-only camera will.
 
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