there is no perfect digital camera around $500

dolph

Diamond Member
Jan 18, 2001
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i've been reading reviews of the g3, dsc-f717, 5700, 7hi, and the 5050. all of them have some kind of issue, whether it's barrel distortion, chromatic abberations, high noise at low isos... it just goes on and on (yes, i know the 7hi and the 5700 are well above $500). i have an old nikon 950 right now that i want to ebay before it drops too much in value, and i know any of these cameras would make a suitable replacement, but i just have this sinking feeling that no matter what i get, i'll have buyer's remorse. anyone want to comment on a topic that's been beaten to death?
 

Looney

Lifer
Jun 13, 2000
21,938
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Then don't buy it if you're going to have buyer's remorse. Very few things in life are perfect. And just because those cameras have those problems, doesn't mean you're going to notice them. I've seen pictures taken from the old F707, and G3s, and they were perfect to my eyes. Are you a professional photographer?
 
Aug 16, 2001
22,505
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Reading to many reviews is bad.

Just list the features you look for.
Find the cameras that has those and take one.
 

beer

Lifer
Jun 27, 2000
11,169
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its all a matter of preception. everything in life had pros and cons. deal with it and pick the one that minimizes the cons, or spend more money.
 

dolph

Diamond Member
Jan 18, 2001
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it's not a question of being a professional photographer, but knowing what sacrifices to make. of course nothing will ever be perfect, but i read too much dpreview.com where every atom of the camera is put under the microscope. i think, all things considered, the canon or the sony would fit me best, but i'd just like to find reassurance before i sink my money into one of them.
 

Koing

Elite Member <br> Super Moderator<br> Health and F
Oct 11, 2000
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Originally posted by: dolph
it's not a question of being a professional photographer, but knowing what sacrifices to make. of course nothing will ever be perfect, but i read too much dpreview.com where every atom of the camera is put under the microscope. i think, all things considered, the canon or the sony would fit me best, but i'd just like to find reassurance before i sink my money into one of them.

Either would be good. You are going to get barrel distortion with a 5x zoom lense of that size.

If you couldn't seattle with either then I would save for the Cannon 10D. Then you have to factor in whatever lense you want.

Here will be a lot of money for a lense. But then for the price of that lense you get *quality* that is not the same in the digital world. For the price of the lense you could easily get another 3-4mp digital camera itself!

Save and go Pro.