It sounds like the Canon S50 would be right for you. It has more features than Canon's Digital Elph (i.e. S230, SD100, S400) and Sony's DSC-Px lines. It's 5MP with a 3x zoom. It's a little bigger than the compacts, but it does have more manual features that you can use as you "grow" as a photographer.slipper said:its for basic photographs, nothing fancy. however i would like to try some amateur photography and experiment with different features. so something expandable would be good.
I wholeheartedly second this, I bought a A70 (3.2 MP) as I didn't have the extra cash, but the feature-set is near identical...mine has been brilliant and the increased resolution of the A80 make it even better...but go to a camera store and play around, there are alot of good cameras out there with varying form-factor/features to choose from. Good hunting...cosman2001 said:it cost me $399 plus $100 for high speed (40X) 256 flash memory.
This thing takes awesome pictures, especially at night. But the best thing about this camera is that the LCD screen swings out and can rotate 180 degrees. Perfect for taking those closeups of you and your friends and seeing what you look like before you take it. This is a 4 MP camera, and the quality of the images are awesome even on photo paper. For the price this is the best camera, because no other camera had the neat LCD function. So far I have had no problems at all.
12" powerbook, 17" 1st gen iMAC, green minipod
cosman2001 said:it cost me $399 plus $100 for high speed (40X) 256 flash memory.
This thing takes awesome pictures, especially at night. But the best thing about this camera is that the LCD screen swings out and can rotate 180 degrees. Perfect for taking those closeups of you and your friends and seeing what you look like before you take it. This is a 4 MP camera, and the quality of the images are awesome even on photo paper. For the price this is the best camera, because no other camera had the neat LCD function. So far I have had no problems at all.
12" powerbook, 17" 1st gen iMAC, green minipod
poopyhead said:I whole heartedly third this
I have an a80 and it's wonderful
slipper said:whats a good digital camera in the $400 range? $400 gotta be including a decent size memory card. i wish we could afford a Sony V1 but thats a little out of our price range. is there something comparable to the Sony V1 from a lower priced manufacturer?
Tell me about it. Not only pricey but hard to find. Took me forever to find a 512 meg Duo Pro memory stick and even then I had to settle for a 2-week backorder (which was better than the 5-6 weeks elsewhere). And, looking back, it's depressing how happy I was to find it for $185. at Dell. You can get 512 meg CF cards (used by the S400) for a hundred bucks.aswitcher said:Check out DPReview and Steves Digicams for reviews and example pics etc.
Sony memory can be pricey...parts as well
Good advice. May as well not have it at all. Most pointless thing I've ever seen on a camera. 😛aswitcher said:Ignore digital zooms
That's a tough spec to get on a $400 camera. Canon doesn't seem to list the framerate of the A80 or S400. They just list the sizes (320x240 and 160x120). The 640x480 at 30fps is one of the things that drew me to my Sony. Of course, it'll only fit about 6 minutes of that on a 512 meg card. 😉 After playing with it for a while, I wish Sony had given me more options for video quality. It's got 160x120, highly compressed, 640x480 at 15fps, and 640x480 at 30fps. It's like "crappy", "wow", and "OMG". It'd be nice to have "OK", "decent", and "not bad" between crappy and wow.aswitcher said:Look at video options with sound, preferably 30fps. It chews memory but is a nice option for birthdays, making short clips like pans of scenary etc
This one's a bit of a tough call. Some cameras have incredible proprietary battery packs that can go all day without recharging. I borrowed my grandpa's G1 for my last vacation and I never saw a low battery indicator. And I filled and dumped his 128 meg card several times each day and used the LCD viewfinder almost exclusively.aswitcher said:You're better with good rechargable AA batteries than a built in battery - you can easily get AAs switched when away from home to keep shooting
Look hard at battery life in reviews
ive been checking online but i cant seem to find the dirrerence between the 400 and 410. can someone enlighten me?jtown said:look at the Canon S400/S410
Toe said:It's list price is $500, so that should get around your $400 range.
The PowerShot S410 Digital ELPH is the successor to the popular PowerShot S400, this new model offers all of the advantages of its distinguished predecessor, upgrades a number of existing features and adds the new Print/Share button. Print/Share speeds and simplifies printing to compatible Canon Direct Photo and PictBridge enabled printers and one-touch image transfer to Windows (XP, Me, 2000, and 98) computers for use with image processing programs, uploading to the Internet, or placement in email.
Depends on your search engine... I'm seeing $435 on froogle.jtown said:Actually, the current price range for the S1 is $495.00 to $499.99. 🙂 Probably won't see much of a price drop before summer.
thinkofthestars said:I would NEVER buy a camera that used regular batteries, it seems like an awful waste.