Tea
Storage? I am Storage!
Bahhh..... Tannin does a poor job of using flash with any camera. His fancy SLRs help, and he went stupid and bought a twin head macro flash a while back, but so far as flash goes, he's a non-talent.
After all consideration we're still leaning towards the SD900. But I'm going to do my best to wait a week or so before buying (hard to do .. I just got my bonus). PMA 2007 is March 8-11 so I'll hold off to see if any interesting announcements are made.
In the fast-moving, 'bigger better faster' world of the digital compact the Fujifilm FinePix F30 will be one of the rare few that are remembered after they have gone (the nearest this throwaway business gets to a 'classic'). The reason this unassuming, blocky little camera stands out from the scores of other cameras launched last year - and why it has a mantelpiece covered in industry awards - is simple; image quality, or more specifically, high ISO performance. [...] Although it has its share of faults the F30 became the benchmark by which all compact cameras in the 6-8 megapixel sector were judged.
[...]
To sum up; the F31fd is everything the F30 was, with a couple of tweaks here and there that - on balance - can be considered to offer a slight improvement over what was already a uniquely capable camera. I suspect (though I hope I'm wrong) that this is the last time we'll see this sensor in a compact camera, as Fuji feels the pressure to keep up with the megapixel race ever more strongly. This would be a real tragedy; the F31fd hits the image quality 'sweet spot' by using a large sensor, relatively low pixel count and some very clever processing, and I can't see them repeating this with a more densely-packed sensor. It is the perfect illustration of the oft made point that more pixels do not mean better quality; we've compared the F31fd to a whole range of much more expensive compacts going right up to 10MP, and - aside from a little extra resolution at base ISO - it puts most of them to shame. Once you get to ISO 400 there simply isn't a compact on the market that can hold a flame to it.
Dpreview just reviewed the Fuji F31fd
Excerpt from dpreview:
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/fujifilmf31fd/
To give you an idea of how effective VR is, I did manage to shoot at 200 mm handheld at 1/6 sec and 52 mm at 1/2 sec without any blurring.
You use auto exposure bracketing to give yourself 3 shots usually, with about 2 EV between them, giving you 4 more stops of dynamic range than you would normally have.
Will Rickards said:New review from dpreview.com of Canon TX1 that weird vertical digicam/camcorder gadget...
Or maybe there is a truly innovative format that will take the photography world by storm. And we will have someone dominate the market like the iPod does. Doubtful.
I would suspect that a pistol-like format would be the most stable, easy to use. Considering that the objective with a pistol and a camera are the same (easy to move around, easy to aim quickly, easy to hold still, precise timing of the trigger) I think it makes a lot of sense.
Mother gets gunned down by police at Anaheim's Disney theme park for allegedly holding Mickey Mouse and two children at gunpoint.
Authorities later discovered that the gun the woman was pointing at Mickey and the two children was, in fact, the new Cannon PowerShot P38 digital camera. Witnesses said they thought the kids just wanted their mother to take a picture of them with Mickey, when she pulled out what appeared to be a weapon from her purse and pointed it at them.
The startled crowd yelled "she's got a gun!", and armed security forces surrounded the foursome. An unnamed source stated that "we repeatedly asked her to drop it, and she said 'no way in hell I'm dropping it... you know how much this thing cost?'"
The Cannon PowerShot P38 retails for $599 US, and is the first point & shoot digital camera to have 20 megapixels of resolution and be shaped like a pistol. When asked if they thought about the consequences of designing a digital camera that looked like a gun, Cannon declined to comment.
Cute story e_dawg. Of course, it wouldn't have to look like a pistol, just have the traits that make it's design useful. I suspect if would look more like a radar gun than an actual pistol.
This sounds really interesting. Filter Pledges Crisp Photos in Low Light
edawg, I was this close to posting a similar made up story except mine went on to detail the consequences following the results of your story. "Homeowner gunned down by what he thought was a camera."