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SmartWare — Buyers Guide ’06
Digital cameras, scanners, printers, and monitors are imaging essentials, but how to choose from the countless offerings? Buying more capability than you need can be a big waste of money; getting less than you need can mean having to spend again before recouping your investment. Here’s expert advice on how to sort through the confusion and make smart purchases. 

by Eric Grevstad
December/January 2006
Peripheral Thinking
Mac versus PC? Nonissue. No matter what combination of CPU and software turns your ideas into images and pages, the pieces of hardware that make it possible are peripherals—devices that attach to a computer for input or output. Take away your keyboard, mouse, and monitor, and good luck using your computer.

Some peripherals, such as keyboards and printers, were essential before PCs and Macs existed. Others, such as digital cameras, are relative newcomers that have become requirements for imaging and design work. In this overview and in detailed guides in upcoming issues, DG will translate tech buzzwords and brief you on buying decisions for four categories of peripherals. Two—digital cameras and scanners—help you put data into the computer for creative manipulation and editing. Two others— printers and monitors—deliver the results.

Digital Cameras
Boon to photographers and poison to Polaroid sales, digital cameras let you snap a picture, see it instantly, delete it and shoot again if an image doesn’t please you. You can also make dozens of prints before a one-hour photo lab can, and even shoot low-res videos suitable for web use. And digital image quality has caught up with—if not surpassed—35mm film, although film cameras are still quicker on the draw for startup and rapid shooting.

Scanners
Scanners and digital cameras are technological siblings (with a shared second cousin, the optical mouse): Their sensors look at real-world patterns of light and convert them to digital data. While a digital camera can transfer its images directly to a PC, it takes a scanner to turn a glossy print or paper document into a computer file for editing, use in a publishing project, or digital archiving on CD or other media.

Printers
If you remember when creating text meant typesetting and designers had to send projects to a print shop to get comps or transparencies, the output quality of today’s $50 home printer can boggle your mind … and even design professionals can be happy with a printer priced under $500.

Monitors
The future is flat: Notebook PC-style liquid crystal displays (LCDs), once ritzy status symbols, are pushing aside classic cathode ray tube (CRT) technology in all sizes and price classes for desktop monitors. That includes CRTs labeled as flat screen or “flat square” for their curveless front surfaces; these are not to be confused with skinny flatpanel LCD monitors.

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