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Canon PowerShot SD10 Digital Elph
The smallest Digital Elph yet, the petite and undeniably chic Canon PowerShot SD10 packs a lot of digital photography power. It features a 4-megapixel resolution, movie mode with audio for up to 3 minutes of video, 5-point AiAF, and a fixed focus lens with 5.7x digital zoom. This model comes in stylish black, but the SD10 also comes in white, bronze, and silver.
The PowerShot SD10 offers a 4-megapixel CCD sensor that produces images up to 2272 x 1704 pixels for photo-quality 11 x 14 inch enlargements. Other resolution modes include 1600 x 1200, 1024 x 768, and 640 x 480. The fixed focus lens has a focal length of 2.8mm. The SD10 enables you to get closer to your subject with its 5.7x digital zoom. The SD10 also features Canon's nine-point AiAF system for focusing accuracy and shutter speeds of 15 to 1/1,500 second.
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Canon PowerShot SD300 Digital Elph
Styled to be easy to hold, engineered for simple use while fostering creative energies, the PowerShot SD450 Digital-Camera sets itself apart from others by being the most friendly camera to use.
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Casio Exilim Zoom EX-Z40
You'll never fall in love faster than this. The new EXILIM ZOOM EX-Z40 with 4.0 megapixels is ready in seconds to take etraordinarily sharp pictures. With the Direct On function, you won't miss any more photo opportunities. After just 1.6 seconds, you can start taking pictures, or viewing images you've already shot. The shutter release is even quicker at just 0.01 sec. More power. More pictures. Thanks to CASIO's unique new technology, power consumption has been reduced considerably. The EX-Z40 is equipped with the new, high performance SUPER LIFE battery. So you can take up to approximately 360 photos without recharging the battery.
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Casio QV-4000
The Casio QV-4000 appears conventional, and its designers took a few mental steps outside of the box. Serious photographers will appreciate the sharp-as-a-tack images, extensive user controls, and assortment of unique features, such as its soft-portrait and best-shot selector modes. But its heavy dependency on icons makes operating the camera unnecessarily complicated. A few finishing touches, like easier-to-turn control knobs, a separate OK button, an extended eyecup, and an accessory shoe would make for far smoother operation.
The QV-4000 offers a range of high-end features, from a high-speed, auto-focus zoom lens and five shooting modes (including full manual and 60-second time exposures) to five focus modes (like an easy-to-use movable-spot focus) and seven white-balance options. It can also record video clips until the memory card fills up (displaying a countdown in seconds) but not audio. Three metering modes, an external flash connector, automatic exposure bracketing, and a histogram round out the options.
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Casio QV-R40
The Casio's value line of digital cameras, the QV-R40 ($300 street) compact is significantly thicker and less stylish than Exilim models. It also has a smaller LCD viewfinder than most Exilims and doesn't come with Casio's convenient one-touch cradle/charger. But it is one of the least expensive 4-megapixel units on the market, boots up quickly, and produces very good images. Best of all, it puts fun back into photography.
With nickel trim and a softly rounded aluminum body, the QV-R40 bears a close resemblance to Canon's Digital Elphs. It weighs 7.5 ounces with batteries, and at 2.4 by 3.4 by 1.3 inches (HWD), is still quite compactomically sculpted and strategically placed, and you can easily operate the camera with one hand. Pressing the Power switch on top or the Shoot or Playback buttons on the back turns the camera on. The 1.6-inch no-glare LCD viewfinder is smaller than the 2-inch LCD on the Exilim EX-Z3 but has the same 85K resolution, so images appear slightly sharper. The QV-R40's optical viewfinder lacks a focusable diopter, which would be useful for eyeglass wearers. The unit can run on two double-A batteries and ships with a pair of high-capacity (2,100 mAh) NiMH batteries and an external charger.
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Concord Eye-Q 4360z
The Concord Camera, a leader in high-quality low-priced digital cameras, today announced at CES shipment of their new 4 Megapixel 3x optical zoom point & shoot digital camera, the Concord Eye-Q 4360z. With a suggested retail price of $199, the Concord Eye-Q 4360z delivers exceptional price/performance.
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Fujifilm FinePix A340
The Fujifilm FinePix A340 is designed for the novice who wants who wants a very simple, reasonably priced camera with good enough resolution for 8-by-10 prints. With its Fujinon f/2.8 to f/5.6 5.7 mm to 17.1 mm lens (38 mm to 114 mm, 35 mm equivalent) with 3X optical zoom, the compact, affordable A340 offers decent performance and image quality. But if you don't mind spending $50 more, you can step up to the Kodak LS743, our Editors' Choice in this class.
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Fujifilm FinePix F440
The FinePix F440 Zoom continues the line of square-styled digital cameras from Fujifilm. Measuring in at 74.5(W) x 62.3(H) x 21.3(D) mm and only 150g, precious millimetres have been shaved off.
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Fujifilm FinePix S5100
The Fujifilm FinePix S5100 is almost identical to last year's FinePix S5000, the main difference being that Fuji's proprietary 3.1-megapixel SuperCCD HR image sensor has been replaced with a conventional 4MP CCD. The result is a very fast shooter that takes very good pictures. If it had built-in antishake technology, it would be a serious contender for Editors' Choice among superzooms. As it is, if money's tight, this is a very good choice in the category.
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HP Photosmart 850
The HP Photosmart 850 is a large, handsome camera that's easy to hold. Its most distinctive features are a rubberized handgrip and lens barrel, a huge 8X optical zoom lens, and a cylindrical electronic through-the-lens viewfinder that automatically turns on when you look through it. The camera dock with one-button upload is a $79 option.
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