digital camera
Duration : 3 min
Canon EOS 550D Digital SLR Camera – Part 1 – Unboxing. In this video I show you the Canon EOS 550D 18-55mm Lens Kit. Please check back on the channel regularly for further videos showing the performance of this brand new camera.
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Manufacturer: http://www.canon.co.uk/
Sponsor: http://www.academyclass.com/
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Duration : 0:6:0
I hear it has 15.1 megapixels for each photo which is great! Also, I hear it has full HD (1080) video, but is the fps any good for that? Please give me details to how this is a good camera or not.
Nathan and Jim have no idea what they are talking about. They are thinking Canon is just a generic company making big megapixels with no quality, when they should only be thinking about that with non professional brands.
I own the T1i and it is an amazing piece of technology. Canon’s technology improved so much that they were able to take the 15.1mp DIGIC 4 sensor from the Canon 50D prosumer DSLR ($1200 retail) and put it in a Rebel Xsi body, creating a small form factor camera with Pro quality and then they added 1080p HD shooting. The T1i is the highest quality rebel and is worth more than the $800 it costs.
I owned an Xsi before the T1i, and from experience my photos are at least twice the quality in color and detail, because the T1i has the new Digic 4 sensor rather than the older Digic 3.
-This video is just one of the many projects Eyecon Video Productions has produced. Go to www.eyeconvideo.com to see more samples, production snapshots, video production tips and much more!
Duration : 31 sec
Olympus E3 Digital SLR camera review by What Digital Camera magazine http://www.whatdigitalcamera.com
More camera reviews: http://www.whatdigitalcamera.com/equipment/
Duration : 0:7:11
i have a canon EOS digital rebel xt 8 megapixel camera. I recently moved and in the move i lost the software cd that came with the camera. I wouldn’t have noticed but i had to replace the hard drive in my computer and when i went to reinstal the camera software and drivers i didn’t have the disk and i have went to the canon website and all they seem to me to have is the updater for the actual software. i plugged my camera into my pc and it didn’t recognize the camera and i don’t know what to do. i have a thousand doller camera and i have no way pf getting the pictures off the camera.. can anyone help me?
i was able to download the editing software from canon.com but i can’t figure out what file is needed to make the pc recognize the camera with the usb plug in. i have the editing software. i think its called drivers. i just don’t nor can’t figure out what to download. can someone send me a link?
dale i would love for you to send me your extra cd. email me.. thanks
They have a toll free phone number or try your local Canon dealer for help.
The PowerShot A560 frees you to capture your precious moments as unforgettable images. Loaded with easy-to-use Canon features, the A560 is made for those who don't want complexity to get in the way of their creativity. A high-quality camera you'll be proud to own, the A560 has a 7.1 Megapixel CCD, 4x Optical Zoom Lens, DIGIC III Image Processor with Face Detection Technology and many other impressive features. It's a camera that let's you do more, more easily.
Duration : 6 min 28 sec
From a 10x Optical Zoom lens to advanced Canon technology that automatically gives you the best shot, the 9.0-megapixel PowerShot SX110 IS packs impressive value. Advanced Face Detection Technology automatically sets focus, exposure, flash and white balance for beautiful portraits and group shots. Sharp, steady close-ups are easy with the powerful zoom and Canon’s Optical Image Stabilizer Technology. The slim and modern-looking SX110 IS is sized to go everywhere, and you’ll never miss a detail with the big, bright LCD screen.
Duration : 0:7:50
help please! and please give me an explantion of why you believe that camera is better
actually scratch that. the canon eos digital rebel xti or the nikon d80?
I posted a "question" to get this information out there. You may find the answers to that question helpful.
"The February 2007 issue of Popular Photography has just come out and they compared the top 10 MP DSLR’s. I am posting this question for general information and so I can refer to it in future answers.
"I took the scores and ranked the cameras similar to the way Formula 1 gives championship points. I just gave 5 for 1st place down to 1 for last place, splitting the difference when cameras tied in their catagories.
"They evaluated Image Quality (giving this twice as much weight as anything else), Ease of Use, Control, and System Flexibility.
"The final order and my scores are:
Nikon D80 – 17.5 points
- BEST in Image Quality, Control and System Flexibility
Canon Rebel XTi – 13.5 points
- Tied for best in System Flexibility
Pentax K10D – 11 points
- Tied for best in Ease of Use
Samsung GX10 – 11 points
- Tied for best in Ease of Use
Sony Alpha 100 – 7 points
- LAST in Image Quality, Ease of Use and System Flexibility."
Go to the original question and read the responses for more opinions.
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;_ylt=AiG00eHyd0oq5b.X7J.jiULzy6IX?qid=20070113133139AAHWJY0
~~~~~~~~~~
One of my boilerplate answers……
Comparing the Nikon D80 vs. Canon 400D/Rebel XTi
Check this page:
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/nikond80/page21.asp
The first thing I notice is that the Canon does not have a spot meter. I thought they added that in the XTi, but I guess past criticism was not heard at Canon.
The Nikon user-definable Auto-ISO is an interesting feature that lets you define a couple of parameters about what’s acceptable to you and what’s not. I don’t think this would be the tie-breaker, though, if you can’t decide between cameras.
The D80 has a pentaprism and the Canon uses mirrors. "They" say that mirrors are getting pretty good, but I would expect the pentaprism to be a brighter viewfinder.
The Nikon lets you do actual multiple exposures in the camera and some people think this is pretty cool.
Click "next" and move to page 22 and you’ll see some image comparisons. Click "next" a couple more times to see more direct comparisons on page 25. Click "next" a couple more times to see some noise level comparisons on page 27. It looks to me like the D80 has actually tamed the noise better than the XTi, but read the comments about image softness.
Click one more time and see that the D80 is clearly the winner in image sharpness.
Go on to the next page and read the conclusions.
You can go to the side-by-side at
http://www.dpreview.com/reviews/compare_post.asp?method=sidebyside&cameras=canon_eos400d%2Cnikon_d80&show=all and also click on "Our in depth review" and "Read owner opinions" for each camera.
The last line in the Nikon D80 review reads, "If you’re a more discerning photographer who can see the advantages offered by the ‘all round’ D80 you may well consider the extra money well spent."
The last line in the Canon 400D/XTi review reads, "Thanks to its blood line and low price the EOS 400D will no doubt be a huge success for Canon. However unlike the EOS 350D, for me it’s no longer the first or obvious choice, so before jumping on the bandwagon make sure you’ve weighed up the competition."
In other words, you’ve selected with the two best cameras in their price class.
Canon is probably saving a little money using their CMOS sensor and this will bring them some market share. Whether the sensor and images are better or not is open to wild debate based on personal preferences. Whether one camera feels better in your hands might just be the determining factor. You have got to go to a real camera store and handle them both. I guess Costco, Circuit City or Best Buy would also have actual samples on display, but you may not get as much help from the staff.
As far as lens choice, I’d rather see you start with one decent lens instead of the kit lens, although Nikon’s kit lens (18-55) has actually tested pretty will. Canon’s new 18-55 "II" kit lens seems okay. For Nikon, I like the Nikkor AF-S 18-70 f/3.5-4.5G ED DX. This costs about $300. I bought this for my wife on her D50 and liked it so much (for the money) that I bought it as a backup for one of my cameras. For Canon, one of our best answerers (Panacea) recommends the EF-S 17-85mm f/4-5.6 IS USM. This costs about $500, so there goes the $200 price difference.
Of course, you’ll need a decent memory card and I recommend a genuine Sandisk Ultra II (60X) or Extreme III (133X) of at least 1GB – preferable 2 GB – for either camera. Lexar is another excellent card supplier and they have the "Professional" 133X as well as the Platinum 80X to choose from. Both Lexar and Sandisk come with image recovery software and limited lifetime warranties.
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