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Canon PowerShot A640
Boasting a powerful Canon 4x optical zoom lens, a 2.5" vari-angle LCD monitor and Canon's intuitive DiG!C processor, the 10.0MP PowerShot A640 deliver simply better pictures. With a choice of manual controls and an extensive range of shooting modes, you can be as creative as you like or let Canon technology assist you. Getting that great family portrait or capturing the stunning landscape from your latest trip has never been easier. The PowerShot A640 offers the flexibility to let you make the most of your photography skills or to learn as you go. The PowerShot A640 is the perfect choice to express your photographic creativity.
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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 A80
Inside the PowerShot A80's gleaming metal case are all the sophisticated Canon technology and advanced shooting features that put this camera in a class by itself. Exquisitely compact and simple to operate, yet remarkably affordable; the A80 allows anyone to create lively, memorable images straight out of the box.
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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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Fujifilm FinePix S5000
The FinePix S5000 Zoom represents an affordable, compact, lightweight three megapixel (SuperCCD pixels) digital camera with a ten times optical zoom lens and an SLR-like appearance. To my eye it's one of the best looking 'SLR-like' digital cameras of recent times. Including four AA batteries the S5000 weighs just 430 g (15 oz, just under 1 lb) and thanks to its grip design feels very comfortable to use. Although the camera has a certain amount of manual control it doesn't seem to be aimed directly at the serious prosumer, it's lacking some features (such as manual white balance) which those users will only get from a camera like the S602 Zoom. That said this is a camera which could be taken on holiday as a 'full range' camera, used for casual sports events and more.
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Fujifilm FinePix S7000 Zoom
The S7000 Zoom marks the fifth generation of Fujifilm's top-end prosumer digital camera. The camera looks almost identical to the S602 Pro Zoom which was announced in November 2002 (it was a subtle update of the S602 Zoom). The only physical differences between the two is the addition of the new FinePix 'Photo mode' button on the rear of the camera, the removal of the Pro's PC Sync terminal, a gold SuperCCD logo and a change of the silk screen on the side of the lens barrel, the S602 Pro Zoom said '6x Optical Zoom', the S7000 says '19x, 6x Optical, 3.2x Digital' (a slide back to marketing tactics of the late 90's).
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Konica Minolta DiMage Z2
The DiMAGE Z5's 12x optical zoom lens and 4x digital zoom combine for a total 48x zoom. Konica Minolta's proprietary CCD-shift Anti-Shake System--the same one used on the top-of-the-line Maxxum 7D.
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Konica Minolta DiMage Z5
The DiMAGE Z5's 12x optical zoom lens and 4x digital zoom combine for a total 48x zoom. Konica Minolta's proprietary CCD-shift Anti-Shake System--the same one used on the top-of-the-line Maxxum 7D
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Olympus C-740UZ
The new Olympus C-740UZ ($450 street) packs a powerful 10X zoom lens into a compact, lightweight camera body that's not much larger than many cameras with 3X zooms. The lens on the 3.2-megapixel C-740UZ is equivalent to a 38-mm to 380-mm lens on a 35-mm film camera. At just 10.4 ounces, the C-740UZ weighs just a fraction of the roughly 4 pounds a 35-mm film camera with a comparable lens would weigh. If you've been toting a big, heavy zoom lens around to get close-ups of birds, animals, or your kid's soccer matches, this may be the digital camera for you
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Olympus Camedia D-520 Zoom
The D-520 doesn't look like a digital camera, and that's exactly the point. The entry-level D-520 operates like Olympus's popular Stylus line of film cameras. To take a picture with the D-520, you slide open the lens cover, point, and shoot. When you're finished taking pictures, closing the cover turns the camera off. Reviewing your pictures is equally simple: Press the monitor button to see your pictures and use the arrow keypad to move back and forth through the images.
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