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Pentax Optio S40
The Pentax Optio S40 is an ideal camera for travelers -- its tiny body makes it a cinch to carry, and its AA batteries can be easily replaced anywhere in the world. Though the body of the Optio S40 is slightly larger than that of Pentax's other Optio cameras (its dimensions were increased to accommodate the AA batteries), it is still a remarkably small camera that makes a great companion on any adventure. The S40 comes equipped with
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Pentax Optio S4i
Pentax has found a niche for themselves in the digicam market, specializing in stylish, compact models. The Pentax Optio S4 is the latest such camera, an update from last year's Optio S. Sporting a 4.0 megapixel CCD, the Optio S4 literally fits inside an empty Altoids tin, giving Pentax a competitive edge in the portable digicam market. Pentax has also enhanced the Optio S4 with buffer memory for faster shot to shot speed and minor but welcome interface improvements. Read on for more details, this cool little design just got cooler!
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Samsung Digimax V4
The Samsung Digitmax S800 Digital Camera is a full featured yet easy to use camera designed to deliver maximum value, style and performance for digital photographers of all skill and experience.
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Sony CD Mavica MVC-CD400
The new Sony CD Mavica MVC-CD400 ($800 street) is Sony's best Mavica yet. This 4-megapixel beauty is easy to use, takes excellent photos, and boasts infinite storage thanks to its 156MB 3-inch mini CD compatibility.
Like the Mavicas before it, the camera's allure is the inexpensive media ($6 to $10 apiece) and cable-free image uploading: just pop the disc into the CD drive on any Mac or PC. (The MVC-CD400 includes a USB connection for conventional camera-to-computer image downloading.
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Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-85
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S85 is the company's latest consumer digital camera, a second-generation improvement over its 3-megapixel DSC-S70 model. The DSC-S85 is a black, chubby, value-packed camera that should appeal to business users, upscale families, and others who want great resolution without unnecessary complexity.
The DSC-S85 is equipped with a very sharp, high-speed f-2.0 3X Carl Zeiss lens that macros as close as 1 5/8 inches. Its 4-megapixel CCD translates into a top resolution of 2,272-by-1,704, but there are only two compression levels for JPEG images (fine and standard) plus uncompressed TIFF.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S60
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S60 is a lightweight, reasonably priced compact camera that will serve beginners well. It's a little on the large side, but the DSC-S60 produces quality still shots that make it a good entry-level compact camera.
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Toshiba PDR-M81
The boxy, gray-and-black PDR-M81 uses a Sharp CCD, rather than the Sony unit found in the other 4-megapixel cameras in our roundup. It has three compression levels but no uncompressed TIFF formats, and the PDR-M81 can record 320-by-240 or 160-by-120 movies with sound. Its zoom lens macros down to 4 inches and recesses into the body when not in use. But there's no protective lens cover or provision for attaching auxiliary lenses. Images save to SmartMedia, and the unit runs on four double-A batteries
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