What features to see before buying a digital camera?
By sheelgohe
@sheelgohe (118)
India
January 20, 2007 5:01pm CST
Hi friends, I am planning to buy a digital camera for my personal use as well as wanted to learn some photography too. Yesterday I went to buy a digi camera but was confused. Can you guys suggest me about the features that i should look in a digicam before buying it. And also tell me which company is best in this. I heard of nikkon's cams are best but was a bit confused.
9 responses
@jayperiod (870)
• United States
21 Jan 07
Obviously, megapixels is the big thing. How many million dots will make up the picture? But, that's not the complete story.
Another important bit of information to find out is the "dpi" or dots per inch. The human eye sees about 240 dpi. If the cameras resolution is 100 dpi, it will look grainy to the eye. The problem is that most salesmen don't know that information and it's not readily printed on the box.
We all want a deal, but with electronics you have to realize that when good cameras are going for $300, a $100 camera is missing something. The biggest cost of a camera is the sensor, what captures the photo. That's what will determine the dpi, resolution and picture quality.
You'll also want good zoom. You can't always get as close to your subject as you'd like, so you need to have zoom. If the lens doesn't move, you're not getting optical zoom, only digital zoom. All digital zoom does is zoom on the photo, not the subject.
There are a lot of good camera companies out there. Nikon, Canon, Samsung, Sony, the list goes on. I suggest checking out www.popphoto.com to read some reviews. Also www.cnet.com has good, trustworthy reviews. Read, compare and research.
The last thing you want to do is go to the store with a few possible models in mind. Then hold each one. The one that feels best in your hand will provide you the best pictures. If it's awkward to hold, you'll get shake or you'll just get tired of using it and stop.
2 people like this
@bobmnu (8157)
• United States
21 Jan 07
If you want to learn Photography I would suggest you go to the Library and read a book on basic photography - film or digital it the same. When you go to buy a camera be ready to answer some basic questions. What type of photos do I want to take? Where will I be taking the photos? How will I view the photos?
If you want to primarly learn to take pictures to share over the internet and not make large prints or crop the picture way down you could get a good camera for about $100 to $150. If you look at a 3 megapixel camera with a good zoom, an Auto mode and several custom modes - Action, Night shots, Landscape, Portrates etc. You will be able to see what you want the camera to do and what you are missing.
I would suggest that you stick with a Canon (my favoriate), Nikon, Kodak, Olympus, Sony or Fugi brands. These offer a wide range of cameras with many different options. The last three have one draw back and that is that they all use properity memory cards. Which means you have to buy a special card that may not be used in other types of cameras or devices. Canon, Kodak and Nikon all use Secure Digital (SD) or Compact Flash (CF) cards which can be used in other cameras if you decide to upgrade. If you buy Sony and decide to switch to a Canon you would have to buy all new cards. i would suggest that you look for a camera with a quality lens, it has an optical zoom, and multipul settings to shoot.
A good web site to visit to read reviews on cameras is www.dpreview.com They rate all types of cameras and have forums that you can read what uses think of different cameras.
@sheelgohe (118)
• India
22 Jan 07
Thanks guys for all your valuable information. This will help me a lot while selecting the best camera for me. Last week I bought a SONY handycam DVD755e. It has 12x optical zoom and 800x digital zoom. We can also take stills from that handycam. But my problem is stills are of not good quality. I mean they are not clear, even the colors are also dull. Do I have to make any settings or there is some problem with the cam. Did anyone of you used that handycam?
@marief2rnurse (2704)
• United States
27 Jan 07
I have a vivitar and it was only less than $200. What I love about it is that it comes with a rechargable battery that kinda looks like a cellphone battery. Digital cams use a lot of power so if you use regular batteries, you will use up a lot. I've had mine like a year and it works really great... it even takes videos.
@dh0n_5 (16)
• Philippines
26 Jan 07
For me sir i will consider my budget and used of my digital camera before i think the different features of digital cameras. ex. if i choose higher specs/features and i dont have the budget ill get frustrated =! or if i have the budget and get the higher specs/features and those features will be no used wasted money. or i used the digital cameras for work and get the best digital camera. =
And of cors you have to consider the after sales of the company the warranty the parts etc.
But my recommendation is the Nikon D80 best for aspiring pro photographer and good features/ bigger lcd / 10MP and etc
or Canon s3is best for basic digital camera
@MrNiceGuy (4141)
• United States
21 Jan 07
I wanted a simple camera for snapping quick photos while out and about and I wanted it to have a large LCD screen to view the pictures on. It had to be about 4-6 megapixels since I wanted some quality photos.
I ended up getting the Fuji V10. It is 5.1 megapixels so it takes high quality photos, and it has a 3 inch LCD screen (the largest of any camera). Its really small as well and fits into my pocket.
@tomoe_spy (260)
• Philippines
21 Jan 07
i prefer to use canon, Hail to all canonites ^_^ i always look to every digital camera is their brand's quality 'coz in features all digital camera have the same features it only differs if it's a newly released one
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since your a beginner i prefer you to use a canon 350d
@ediza02 (107)
• Philippines
21 Jan 07
I would sugget you must check informations on the cameras that you like online so you can shortlist which really would you like to get before going to the stores. Check also which one is suitable for your needs and what kind of photos you like to take. I'm sure there are a lot to choose from. If you really want to start seriosly with photography, learn the terms and jargons in photography. Enjoy searching!