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Canon PowerShot A510
The 3.2-megapixel Canon PowerShot A510, which was released in tandem with the 4MP PowerShot A520, is a replacement for the PowerShot A75. It is smaller and lighter than its predecessor, and is identical to the A520 except for its smaller image sensor. Overall, the picture quality is good, but the camera suffers from some of the same flaws as its higher-resolution sibling, especially in the speed department. But the A510 offers excellent flexibility and control for a modest price, making it a good value for those who don't need a whole lot of extra pixels.
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Canon PowerShot A75
The 3.2 megapixel PowerShot A75 can capture images at resolutions of 2048x1536, 1600x1200, 1024x768, 640x480, and Postcard(1600x1200) which is a special 3:2 ratio mode for making 4x6 in. prints. Both the PowerShot A75 and the PowerShot A70 incorporate numerous high-end features including a 3x optical zoom lens, the A75 has a 9-point AiAF autofocus system instead of the 5-point AiAF found on the A70, close focus to 2-inches, and a full range of exposure modes including Program, Shutter Priority, Aperture Priority, Manual and several pre-programmed Scene modes.
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Canon PowerShot S1 IS
PowerShot S2 IS is a more advanced model succeeding the PowerShot S1 IS with a high-powered lens and enhanced movie taking functions.
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Canon PowerShot S30
The 3.2-megapixel PowerShot S30, released concurrently with its companion model, the 4-megapixel PowerShot S40, is a point-and-shoot style digital camera that incorporates many of the G2 features, but in a more compact, portable format. Like the G2, the S30 has an impressive range of automatic and manual exposure controls, a 3x optical zoom lens, JPEG and RAW file formats, and in-camera adjustment of image contrast, sharpness, and color saturation. In addition to these features, the S30 also offers expanded ISO options, an additional metering mode, and the first direct-to-inkjet printer connection, enabling the user to make prints not only to the Canon C-10 Photo Card Printer, but also to the company's newest inkjet ("bubble-jet" in Canon's terminology) printer, the S820D. Priced competitively at a MSRP of $599, the PowerShot S30 is sure to be a popular choice among business users, prosumer photographers, advanced amateurs, and even beginning photographers who want a high-quality digital camera that delivers large, sharp, colorful picture files.
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Casio Exilim EX-S100
The Casio Exilim EX-S100 is perhaps the most elegant camera in our roundup. It has an understated design in stainless steel, with just a few unobtrusive buttons. Further, Casio bills the EX-S100 as the world's smallest digital camera with an optical zoom lens; it's the size of a credit card and amazingly thin, thanks to its novel ceramic lens technology.
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Casio QV-3500EX
This camera is about the size of a typical 35-mm SLR camera, the Casio QV-3500EX has a boxy design that verges on clunky. But it's comfortable to hold and operate in one hand. And it's the only 3-megapixel camera we looked at that supports the IBM Microdrive (you'll have to buy one separately, of course). Most important, although the point-and-shoot crowd will find the QV-3500EX easy to use, it offers enough capabilities to satisfy serious amateurs
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HP 715 Digital Camera
This 3.3-megapixel camera is powerful yet simple to use, a great choice for a beginner. It runs on double-A batteries, so you don't need to recharge it. Pictures can be taken at a high 2,048-by-1,536 resolution.
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Konica Minolta DiMage X31
The Konica Minolta DiMage X31 is a good 3.2-megapixel ultracompact camera geared to the novice shooter. If you're looking for razor-sharp images, this isn't the camera for you; nor is it particularly fast. Still, it's a good camera and far cheaper than most ultracompacts, including our Editors' Choice, the $500 (street) 5MP Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T1.
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Kyocera Finecam S3
The Kyocera Finecam S3 is small. Though twice as thick as a PDA, it's smaller and lighter, fitting right in a shirt pocket. The S3 is a prime choice if you want a camera you can carry without a second thoughts all you need. Despite the smallness, the S3 fits comfortably in large hands (we checked). You can easily hold onto it, adjust the optical or digital zoom, and take pictures securely in one hand. Alas, battery life for the rechargeable lithium ion was the shortest of any camera in this roundup, just 91 shots
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Kyocera Finecam SL300R
The Kyocera Finecam SL300R has knockout styling and a burst mode to die for, it delivers only 3.2 megapixels, no optical viewfinder, and goodecord movies at 30 fps. But it offers only a few other options: manual focus, two f-stops, five program modes, and sharpness levels.
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