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Kodak DC4800
The Kodak is a comfortable-to-hold, stylish device, with conveniently placed controls that make sense. Buttons on the top adjust the self-timer, burst mode, distant/macro, and the flash controls, without making you page through menus. The mode knob, which includes manual f-stops, is marked both on top and on the side, so you can easily see your settings.
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Kodak DC5000
The DC5000 is the one digital camera you'll want on the trail, beach, or oil rig. The camera itself is very similar to the DC3400: It has a virtually identical feature set and produces the same excellent pictures. But no-slip black rubber "ruggedizes" the body, a screw-in filter covers the lens, switches and buttons can be operated with gloves on, and tight-sealing O-rings protect the ports. Short of being dropped into a stream (it's fully weatherized but not waterproof), it will work without risk of damage in dusty or sandy environments.
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Kodak DX 3500
The DX3500's distinctive-looking, gray plastic body is easy to handle, though the rear grip really should be covered with a non-slip material. The 2.2-megapixel CCD can provide 600- by 900-pixel and 1,200- by 1,800-pixel resolution - the densest of any camera in its price range. But other than that, there's a lack of noteworthy features. There are no user-selectable compression levels, exposure-compensation settings, ISO equivalencies, or white balance options. Nor does the DX3500 offer audio, panorama, program, or video modes. You can shoot using normal or macro focus, a four-mode flash, a 3X digital zoom, and a self-timer, but those are the only shooting options.
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Kodak DX3900 Zoom
The Kodak DX3900 Zoom is in the category of point-and-shoot plus. With a macro mode and an assortment of settings that you can change to taste, the DX3900 Zoom is one step up from standard point-and-shoots. But it's not intended for serious amateur photographers, and knowledgeable PC users may find the bundled software annoying.
Whether you consider the DX3900 Zoom easy to use depends on what you want to do with it. The setup menus are easy to follow, but they're tedious to work through and don't offer much manual control
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Kodak EasyShare C533
5.0 MP for prints up to 20 × 30 in. (50 × 75 cm) 3x optical zoom lens 1.8" (4.6 cm) indoor/outdoor color display Cropping, auto picture rotation, and undo-delete On-camera Share button Favorites feature Internal memory plus feature
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Kodak EasyShare C743
This EasyShare camera has 7.1 megapixels, meaning you can make stunning prints up to 20" x 30". With Kodak Color Science, a 3x Optical Apsheric zoom lens, and 5x digital zoom, you will capture clear, bright and beautiful images every time. 13 scene and color modes give you great shots time after time and a continuous video mode allows you to capture life in motion.
The C743 also has simple to use, simple to access features so getting your best shot is as easy as point and shoot. It has several on-camera picture enhancing features including digital red-eye reduction, cropping, blurry picture alert, and undo-delete. Review modes let you magnify up to 8x, scroll through pictures, or view multiple-up or slide shows. You can also protect pictures from accidental erasure. A self timer (with three options: 2 sec., 10 sec., and 2-shot) will let you be in special pictures and a burst mode is ideal for capturing fast action sequences.
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Kodak EasyShare C875
The Kodak's new EasyShare C875 digital camera grants 8.0 megapixel digital images, uses a 5x optical zoom lens, and offers advanced features like Smart Scene Mode and PASM Mode. Have a picture you want to share? Tag it using the exclusive on-camera Share button and it will be ready to print or e-mail later. You can view your pictures on the 2.5" indoor/outdoor color display featuring a wide viewing angle, or use the convenient on-camera picture enhancing features like cropping, blurry picture alert, and undo-delete. You can even combine up to three shots together into one large picture with panorama stitch mode.
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Kodak Easyshare DX3700
The Kodak EasyShare DX3700 ($240 street) is currently the easiest-to-operate 3-megapixel digital camera on the market. It doesn't come equipped with a zoom lens or even auto-focus, but it does have a built-in flash, 8MB of built-in memory (and can accommodate optional CompactFlash), a video-out port, and a superb image sensor capable of producing excellent 8- by 10-inch enlargements.
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Kodak EasyShare DX4900
The DX4900's low price does not come without strings, however. The camera has no movie mode and no sound; it's strictly a still camera. The gold label on the camera grip announces prints ranging from 4-by-6 to 20-by-30. This is true: 4-megapixel cameras will deliver acceptable, and sometimes even good, quality in 20-by-30 size.
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Kodak EasyShare DX6340
Kodak EasyShare DX6340 is a camera for anyone intimidated by the word digital. The newest EasyShare delivers not only exceptional ease of use but also good performance for its class. No wonder it's an Editors' Choice camera. This 3.1-megapixel camera has a 4X optical zoom and comes with 16MB of built-in memory. At 9.4 ounces, it is the heaviest in our roundup, but its heft makes it solid and stable in your hand
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