Cliptin said:Have you tried to resize the clusters with Partition Magic?
Canon Powershot A40. Nice camera.Cliptin said:James said:Excellent timing : I've got to go to HK on business for the week of the 13th. So I can probably get more camera for my money - I'm going to sell my Sun box to cover it (the things I do!).
So what's a good, midpriced digital camera? I'll probably spend about A$800 or so (about HK$4K I guess). Maybe the A40?
James, Curious to know what you ended up with.
Dozer said:Hehe...maybe you could partition and run Linux on it (Hey, it works on the Xbox)
Where did you find it? I thought it had been long superseded by the A40.Cliptin said:I just bought a Canon A20.
time said:Where did you find it? I thought it had been long superseded by the A40.Cliptin said:I just bought a Canon A20.
I only paid about AUD580 in the end, buying it new in Singapore. It's a very nice camera, far better than what I need indeed.time said:It's a while since James was looking. Since then Nikon released the 2500 and 2000 two megapixel cameras. They would have been preferable for his original intention, considering their superior macro capability, and in Oz anyway, lower price.
Not much use at all, really. The movie mode is a bit of a novelty, and you can get a respectable amount of video into a 128MB memory card. But what practical use is it? Not much.But the A40/A20 is still a good camera. BTW, the A40 adds audio to the movie recording mode, which is quarter size and half frame rate. How useful is that additional feature to people here? I'm curious.
adriel said:Wait a minute. How rugged are consumer grade Compact Flash memory modules? Can they be dropped on cement without risk of data loss and/or corruption? How well do they handle environmental extremes of hot and cold? Humidity and altitude? Has anyone here ever had a CF stick loose its data retention?
Also, how sturdy are the CF memory module insertion mechanisms? Do they grasp CF modules tightly, and if so, is the grip mechanically and/or structurally weak?
time said:However, I'd like to pick a bone with Canon over their claims for movie recording (no offense to you). Whereas other manufacturers such as Olympus, Nikon and Sony quote the maximum movie length at QVGA resolution (320x240), Canon quotes it at 160x120!
So the A40 can actually manage only 10 seconds of Quarter VGA footage. At least that's what I've heard, and that's what the manual says.
NickWild said:time said:However, I'd like to pick a bone with Canon over their claims for movie recording (no offense to you). Whereas other manufacturers such as Olympus, Nikon and Sony quote the maximum movie length at QVGA resolution (320x240), Canon quotes it at 160x120!
So the A40 can actually manage only 10 seconds of Quarter VGA footage. At least that's what I've heard, and that's what the manual says.
yes I agree that was a little lame on there part
Hmm...Tea said:Errr ... do upu ean the kangaroos? Or the pelicans?
blakerwry said:wow, their heads seem much larger than I had expected.