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CassBeth welcomes you to our Photography shop featuring 35mm cameras, albums, aps cameras, binoculars, books, cases bags, digital camcorders, digital cameras, drives, film, filters, flashes, frames, really cool guides, instant cameras, lens, memory cards, minox cameras, night vision, nikon, photo software, scrapbooks, slr cameras, telescopes, tripods, underwater cameras, zoom lens, and many other great items. If you can't find it here visit our really great electronics shop.
Digital Camera Digital CameraResolution Advantages.Since digital cameras record images on reusable memory cards instead of film, there are no developing costs, so you can take as many pictures as you want and only print the ones you like. Most digital cameras feature an LCD viewscreen that lets you perfectly compose your photo and then check to make sure it came out the way you'd hoped. Because the images are stored as standard digital files, your computer becomes your darkroom, letting you crop, enlarge, and retouch your photos to perfection. To share your photos, you have numerous options. You can e-mail them to friends or post them on a photo-sharing Web site. If you want prints, you can use an online photofinisher or create them at home on a photo printer. Identifying your needs.When shopping for a digital camera, start by identifying your needs. Will you primarily be viewing your pictures on a computer screen or do you plan to make a lot of prints? Will you be using the camera for professional graphics work? Will you want a zoom lens? Are there specific features you require, like macro ability or movie mode? Knowing what kind of photos you'll be taking most often will help you decide what resolution, storage type, power source, and other amenities you'll need. Check out the specific features below for more details. Resolution Today's consumer digital cameras range in resolution from 640 x 480 (0.3 megapixels) to 2,048 x 1,536 (3.3 megapixels). Common digital-camera resolutions include 2,048 x 1,536 (3 megapixels), 1,600 x 1,200 (2 megapixels), 1,280 x 960 (1.3 megapixels), 1,024 x 768, and 640 x 480. The resolution you need depends on what you plan to do with your photos. If you just want to e-mail photos to your friends or put them on the Web, you'll be happy with a lower resolution like 640 x 480. If you want to print your photos, however, plan on having at least 150 pixels per printed inchin other words, a 1,600 x 1,200 image will look good at printed sizes up to 10.6 by 8 inches. If you try to print lower-resolution images at larger sizes, the results tend to look grainy, blurry, or blocky. Megapixel cameras often offer the option of taking lower-resolution photos so that you can fit more photos in the camera's memory. Compression Memory and image capacity Cameras with internal memory store their images in a nonremovable memory chip embedded within the camera. However, most consumer cameras use external memorya memory card (CompactFlash, SmartMedia, and Memory Stick are all common types) or even a floppy diskthat you can remove when it's full. You can increase the number of photos you can take by buying additional external memory. Most digital cameras ship with enough memory to take from 12 to 36 shots at full resolutionabout the same as one roll of film for a traditional camera. Power source LCD viewfinders Lens The image sensor in digital cameras is smaller than the surface of a 35mm negative, so lenses on digital cameras tend to be much shorter than on traditional cameras. Look for the "35mm equivalent" rating to get a better idea of your camera's range. Most fixed-length lenses on digital cameras fall somewhere between wide-angle and normal focal length. Many digital cameras now offer zoom lenses, which take you from wide-angle to telephoto. In addition to this optical zoom capability, some cameras provide digital zoom, which is nothing more than software in the camera that crops the edges off of your image and blows up the remaining information to the size of the original. While digital zoom adds extra close-up power, this comes at the expense of resolution. Some cameras also have macro capability, which lets you focus very close and take pictures of small objectsuseful for taking photos of flowers, jewelry, etc. Focus and exposure Most cameras automatically determine the correct exposure for the lighting conditions. Sometimes, however, the scene will appear too dark or too washed-out. In these cases, it's handy to have a digital camera that offers manual exposure compensation, allowing you to set the exposure a few stops brighter or darker. A digital camera's ISO-equivalent rating lets you know how light sensitive it is; a camera rated ISO 100, for example, has about the same light sensitivity as a traditional film camera loaded with ISO 100 film. Higher ISO ratings mean the camera is more sensitive to light and can take pictures in darker settings. Digital cameras work just like traditional cameras when it comes to aperture the maximum aperture rating of a camera lets you know how much light it can let in. Aperture ratings represent ratios; the lower the aperture rating, the more light sensitive the camera is and the better it can take photos in low light. Flash Display and image erase Self-timer Audio recording Movie mode Construction TV connections Computer connections Digital cameras can use a variety of different interfaces. Most use a serial or USB interface, which plugs into a port on the back of your computer. Others come with a PCMCIA interface, which can be inserted directly into a notebook computer. Certain cameras use 3.5-inch floppy disks as memory or provide a floppy-drive adapter for the memory cards. Once you've downloaded and edited your images, most e-mail programs will let you attach them to messages. You can also upload them to your Web site or copy them onto floppy disk or CD-R to give to your friends and family. Some color printers have slots that accept your camera's memory card and let you directly print your photos; otherwise, you can use the printer hooked up to your computer. One of the advantages of using a digital camera is that you can make copies of your photos whenever you want, without having to hunt through negatives and send them out for processing at a lab. You can also make calendars, greeting cards, collages, and enlargements easily and inexpensively at home.
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Welcome to another year of cyber shopping at CassBeth. We organize and humanize access to shopping on the entire web, like no other portal on the web. Please don't forget to tell your friends about our special place. Thanks and enjoy your visit.
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