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SmartWare Buyers Guide 2006: Digital Cameras
Our Smart[Ware] series continues with everything you need to know—from the right number of megapixels to telling fake zoom from the real thing—to point and shoot your way into the digital age. 

by Eric Grevstad
February/March 2006
If film cameras are the Walkman, digital cameras are the iPod. Both work fine, but the latter are so cool and convenient you may never go back to 20th-century imaging. Our Smart[Ware] series continues with everything you need to know—from the right number of megapixels to telling fake zoom from the real thing—to point and shoot your way into the digital age.

Photoshop is a wonderful thing. No one can deny that Adobe’s industrial-strength image editor offers a dream set of tools to touch up, tweak, or artistically alter photos in almost any way you can imagine. But when you get right down to it, even Photoshop (or Apple’s Aperture, Corel’s Paint Shop Pro, or whatever) can only do so much: Your project won’t get far if you don’t have the right image to begin with. And increasingly, the way to get that image is with a digital camera.

Over the last 10 years, digital cameras have changed from novelties to superstars of the imaging market, all but driving Polaroid out of business and rapidly gaining on 35mm film. Most photographers still credit film with an edge in image quality for slides rather than prints or for jumbo enlargements, but the convenience of seeing a picture just seconds after taking it, deleting it and shooting again if it doesn’t satisfy, and getting prints from a desktop printer instead of waiting for a photo lab has oldschool silver halide on the run.

Digital cameras have also gotten a lot more affordable, with $200 buying a decent consumer camera, $350 or $400 a take-along snapshooter that even design pros will find handy, and top-of-the-line digital SLRs now dipping below the $1,000 mark.

The biggest drawback to digital photography is its high percentage of buzzwords and jargon—some critical (such as optical versus digital zoom), some not (such as CMOS versus CCD, the two slightly different types of light-capturing sensors used in most cameras). This guide identifies eight buying factors—essentially, technical attributes—selected to help you pick the best camera for your needs … or at least stay awake when the electronics sales clerk begins a spiel.

Factor #1: Resolution—More Than Megapixels
You know buzzword number one: It’s megapixel, the 1,000-pixel unit of measurement for a digital camera’s resolution, indicating its maximum image size and sharpness. There’s an important caveat here, however: Resolution does not equal image quality. Lens quality, color fidelity, in-camera image processing, noise (unwanted speckles or artifacts, the digital equivalent of grain in film images), and other factors will affect what you see.

Still, everyone harps on megapixels, so here goes: For casual consumers, a 3-megapixel camera will take great holiday snapshots; a 4- or 5-megapixel model will make great 8 x 10-inch prints; and a 6- to 8-megapixel digital can readily replace a 35mm camera. By contrast, some design pros won’t trade their 35mm cameras for anything under 12 or 13 megapixels, with some holding out for still higher resolution. And landscape photographers who use 4 x 5-inch film cameras to create wall-sized enlargements won’t be going digital for years to come.

The truth about resolution is that you can’t see more than your monitor or printer can deliver, and you don’t need more than your application demands. Even one megapixel can be overkill for an image destined to appear on a website, while if you’re laying out a page containing a 3-inch-square image at 300 dpi you need 900 by 900 pixels (although you’ll likely use Photoshop to crop or resize a larger image).

Factor #2: Optical Zoom—Accept No Substitutes
Resolution’s best buddy is optical zoom. Even inexpensive digicams today have at least 3X zoom lenses (photo buffs can check specifications for comparisons to film lenses, such as “equivalent to 38–114mm in a 35mm camera”). And some compact cameras now offer 10X or 12X zoom.

Pay zero attention to digital zoom, which tries to go beyond optical zoom by making an interpolated, pixelated enlargement of the center of an image. It’s marginally useful, but as with consumer cameras’ red-eye reduction for flash shots, your PC or Mac image-editing software does it better.

Factor #3: Size—Grab and Go
Some digital cameras have old-fashioned neck straps, but most are sized to slip into a coat pocket, with a number of credit-card sized subcompacts that fit in a shirt pocket. (Add a few ounces to any digicam’s advertised weight; vendors fib by quoting weight without batteries or memory cards installed.)

Factor #4: Viewfinder/Monitor
Whether in the usual rectangular, rounded block or traditional camera shape, every digital camera boasts an LCD screen or monitor used for reviewing images, navigating command menus, and frequently as a viewfinder for framing shots. Some cameras don’t even have an optical viewfinder, though in those that do the viewfinder is usually a bit more accurate than the monitor in setting up shots.

Digital SLRs, of course, have the 100-percent accurate, through-the-lens viewfinders that give singlelens reflex cameras their name.

Some LCDs fold or pivot away from the camera body so you can shoot from different angles or take a self-portrait. The bigger the screen (such as 2.5 versus 1.8 inches) the better, but be aware that most LCDs are hard to see in bright sunlight. (On the other hand, Pentax’s Optio WPi is designed for use in rain, mud, or 5 feet underwater.)

Factor #5: Speed—Power-On, Refresh, Burst, & More
A classic digicam complaint is that no matter how quickly you whip one out of your pocket, you may still miss the shot. Many older models took several seconds to wake up once you pressed the power button, a second or two to actually take a picture after you pressed the shutter button, and a frustrating few seconds between one shot and the next, especially when recharging the flash.

Happily, many modern cameras have cut startup time to under a second and shutter lag to a tenth of a second or less. And though motorized film cameras are still tops for taking rapid-fire shots in succession, digital models’ continuous-shooting or burst modes can take anywhere from one to three or more (usually flash-free) frames per second, although you’ll need to read the fine print about whether that’s using the camera’s highest resolution and whether burst mode can capture a few images or a lengthy series.

Factor #6: Exposure Modes—Setting the Scene
Today even the fanciest cameras are usable by even the laziest consumers, thanks to autofocus and autoexposure modes. But manufacturers encourage users to step beyond point-and-shoot, if only by choosing among combinations of exposure settings for different subjects or environments—fast-paced sports action, a posed portrait, a birthday party, a sunny beach, a mountain range.

Many cameras offer over a dozen of these scene modes or shooting modes, ranging from the Pentax Optio S6’s Landscape and Sunset to the Olympus Stylus 600’s Fireworks and Cuisine. Others let you save your own combinations. Some offer a panorama or image-stitching mode that helps you combine overlapping images to create ultra-wide-angle shots.

Mid-market and higher cameras provide additional steps toward creative control, such as specifying shutter speed or aperture- versus shutter-priority and adjusting white balance or ISO sensitivity. (Digitals can often go a step higher than film cameras, such as ISO 400 versus 200, before showing the noise that corresponds to film graininess.)

Finally, digital SLRs give serious photographers a wide array of fully manual controls, as well as the flexibility to use different lenses and (usually) a hot shoe for connecting an additional flash. They also, by the way, have something you won’t find on many compact cameras: a tripod mount for long exposures or blur-free shots.

Without a tripod, small and light digicams are particularly prone to camera shake. Fortunately, a growing number of units don’t demand steady hands, because they incorporate antishake technology—an image-stabilizing mechanism in the lens or camera body or a digital signal processor that helps sharpen images and remove the effects of shake.

Factor #7: Battery Type & Life
Battery life has always been the bane of digital cameras, especially subcompacts. But current models can take more pictures before going dark than their predecessors could—as many as 300 or 400, though there’s often fine print about shooting with the viewfinder rather than keeping the LCD on.

Low-end and some mid-range cameras use AA alkalines available at any drugstore, though it quickly becomes cheaper to buy a set or two of rechargeable nickel-metal hydride (NiMH) cells and a charger.

Others rely on a proprietary NiMH or lithium-ion battery, packaged along with a charger in the camera box; it’s often smart to buy and carry a spare. Kodak’s and HP’s consumer-oriented cameras fit into a (sometimes included, sometimes optional) desktop docking station that both transfers images to your computer and recharges the camera battery.

Factor #8: Storage Capacity—Never Enough
Speaking of 300 or 400 pics, the worst thing about buying a digital camera is that every one of them skimps on storage. Cameras rarely come with the memory to hold more than a handful of images captured at highest quality and resolution. Casio’s Exilim EX-S500, for instance, boasts 8.3MB of internal memory (many digitals have none at all), but that’ll hold precisely two of the camera’s best 2,560 by 1,920-pixel shots. Like every other digicam, the Exilim obliges you to buy a flash-memory card with at least 512MB and preferably 1GB of storage—and to learn which shape and size of flash card fits into the camera’s slot.

None of the physical card designs—Compact- Flash, Secure Digital, MultiMediaCard, SmartMedia, xD-Picture Card, or Sony’s Memory Stick—is better than another. They all do the same thing, although some memory vendors offer extra-performance, extra-price cards with faster data-transfer rates to help cut recycling time between shots or upload time when emptying a card’s images into your computer. Actually, the array of memory-card choices resembles today’s digital-camera market overall: There are so many choices that it can be confusing, but it’s getting difficult to buy a bad one.

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