Sunday, March 29, 2009

Hot And Latest Models Of Digital Cameras

Digital Camera is now very common today.The Olympus E-30 is a new 12-megapixel, mid-range SLR that introduces Art filters to modify your photographs in interesting ways, and a whole raft of scene modes. The E-30 costs $1299 without lens,and has an articulated LCD that complements its good Live View performance. While we were impressed by the sharpness and good image stabilization, in our extensive lab testing, it did poorly overall, with some notably poor results especially in image noise and dynamic range. Click through for our full results, as well as an in-depth hands-on with the camera.
Many Other Companies launched New Models Of Digital Camera March 31, 2009 – Olympus today announced a new entry-level SLR, the E-450. This 10-megapixel successor to the E-420 will come bundled with both a 14-42mm f/3.5 to f/5.6 and a 40-150mm f/4.0 to f/5.5 lens for $699.99. It has a 2.7-inch LCD, Live View with face detection, and three of the most popular Art Filters seen on its big brother, the E-30. The E-450 will arrive on store shelves in July.


March 25, 2009 - Today Canon announced the EOS Rebel T1i, the first SLR with video recording capability to sell for under $1000. The Rebel T1i will record high-definition video in two formats, 1080p at 20 frames per second and 720p at 30 frames per second (it will, of course, shoot standard-definition video too).

Sony's Cyber-shot DSC-HX1 packs a lot of features into a relatively small space; it has a 20X zoom, shoots high definition video, has a CMOS sensor and includes a number of new shooting modes that Sony claims will produce better pictures. These new modes include a new low light mode called Handheld Twilight and a mode for shooting moving objects called Anti-motion Blur that uses multiple images layered together to produce better looking photos. These new shooting modes are thanks to the improved Bionz processor that also allows shooting at 10 frames a second and can create panoramas in camera in just a few seconds.

Panasonic launched its second Micro Four Thirds camera at PMA with the introduction of the Lumix DMC-GH1, which provides the video recording feature notably missing in the original DMC-G1 camera released last year. At PMA we got our hands on a pre-production sample of the GH1, reasonably feature-complete but not running final firmware. We learned a lot about the camera, as you'll see in our First Impressions review. We didn't learn two crucial bits of information, though: when it will ship, and how much it will cost.

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