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Canon PowerShot G5
The PowerShot G5 was announced at the beginning of June 2003, it is the five megapixel 'companion' (it doesn't directly replace) to the four megapixel PowerShot G3 (which wasn't called the 'G4' because of the similarity between the word '4' and 'die' in certain Asian languages).
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Canon PowerShot G6
Whether you're a point-and-click shooter who's starting to want more control with your photography or an already-converted enthusiast who doesn't want to lug around a digital SLR, the satin-aluminum Canon PowerShot G6 could satisfy on both counts. It's not cheapat $700, it ties the other enthusiast model here, the Sony V3, for the most expensive of our 7MP camerasbut it's well worth the money, making it an Editors' Choice in the enthusiast category.
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Canon PowerShot G7
Canon's acclaimed G-Series has a new top-of-the-line model, and serious photography enthusiasts have a lot to be excited about. A matte black, retro-hip design houses impressive capabilities and top core specifications, including 10.0 megapixels resolution and a powerful 6x optical zoom. Loaded with Canon's latest and most advanced technologies, including an Optical Image Stabilizer for clear shots throughout the zoom range, PowerShot G7 is a camera to be reckoned with.
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Canon PowerShot Pro1
PowerShot S2 IS is a more advanced model succeeding the PowerShot S1 IS with a high-powered lens and enhanced movie taking functions.This camera is equipped with an approximately 5.0 million camera
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Epson R-D1
Touted as the first digital rangefinder camera, the 6.1-megapixel Epson R-D1 is a solid, compact, wonderfully designed camera with an EM mount for more than 200 L- (via an included adapter) and M-mount Leica-type lenses, as well as the Voigtlander 35-mm f/1.7 lens we used for this review.
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Fuji FinePix S9000
The FinePix S9000 digital camera boasts 9.0 effective MegaPixels that capture up to 3,488 x 2,616 recorded pixels (9.12 million) ? the highest resolution of any consumer-grade camera on the market.
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Fujifilm FinePix S7000
The S7000 looks and feels like a slightly miniaturized 35-mm SLR camera, though it's not a true SLR. In place of an optical viewfinder, the S7000 has a 235,000-pixel electronic view-finder (EFV), one of the best we've seen. Another winning feature of the S7000 is its excellent 6X zoom lens, with a 35- to 210-mm effective focal length.
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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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HP Photosmart 945
The HP Photosmart 945 combines simplicity, good resolution, and very good image quality in a clunky-looking camera. It has an eye-level TTL electronic viewfinder, a pop-up flash, and a nonslip battery grip. A glorified point-and-shoot with relatively few controls, the HP 945 has a digital flash that dramatically improves available exposures and includes neat adaptive-lighting technology, and an e-mail button lets you mark a shot to be sent automatically over the Internet. Like the S7000, it comes with nonrechargeable lithium batteries, though HP does sell a cradle ($79, with rechargeables.
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Kodak EasyShare P880
Video takes on a new dimension with the EASYSHARE P880 camera. Capture VGA video at 30 frames per second (Motion JPEG compression) with the unique ability to use full optical zoom, then trim, cut,
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