xoxoRileyx
I am looking into buying a waterproof digital camera. I want to be able to take picture under water on vacation. And good suggestions that aren't too pricey? I was looking at the Olympus TG-310 Blue 14MP Digital Camera Bundle w/ 3.6x Optical Zoom, 2.7" LCD Display, Waterproof on walmart.com and it looks good. Also if I go into salt water with it, will the salt ruin it? I also want it to take good clear picture on dry land.
Answer
Take Panasonic TS3, I have tested this camera, review is below
Take Panasonic TS3, I have tested this camera, review is below
Great quality photo camera?
teganholdw
I've just won a competition and landed up with $2000 prize money, I've always wanted a really nice camera (digital) but unsure what I should looking for or brands etc...
I want a camera that can capture pictures quickly like they do in photoshoots... my current small digi takes at least a second to press the button and hold it down until it takes the shot but I'd like one where in a second it can take a few different pictures (if that makes sense).
Also, when you go to a club and there's a guy walking around with a camera that gets uploaded to the clubs gallery - the pictures are really well detailed, not pixallated at all and are really rich in colour.
AND preferably water proof or at least splash proof
Any suggestions? I'm willing to buy second hand also, or from ebay, I'm not a professional I just want it for when I go to Europe and USA in the next two years :)
Answer
The Best Digital Cameras
This review is intended to help you choose the best compact digital camera for your goals. In coming up with these recommendations for my friends, I looked carefully at Canon digital cameras (often the highest technology), Kodak digital cameras (great balance and simple user interfaces), Sony digital cameras (an alternative to Canon), and Olympus cameras, which can be good values and have some unique features such as weatherproofing.
Digital cameras fall into the following categories:
* ultra compact: good for slipping into a pocket or purse, but the controls and viewfinder are very cramped
* compact: what most people buy, reasonably pocketable, reasonably easy to control
* creative compact: more features and options than "compact", $200 more expensive; good for techno-junkies
* SLR-like: chunky, easy to control with fingers, larger sensors and better image qualty in low light
* SLR: large and cumbersome, best image quality, best low-light capability, best tool when you are going out specifically to take photos (covered in separate article)
[Each of these categories gets a separate section below. If you don't want to wade through this article, my current best recommendations for most people are the Fuji F30 (about $265; chunky but great for photos indoors without flash) and Olympus 720SW (about $280; waterproof and very compact)]
Decide if you're buying a camera to carry with you all the time, and therefore it must be compact, or if you're buying a camera that you will take out when you are specifically engaged in a photographic project. If you only use a camera during your child's soccer game, for example, the responsiveness and controllability are much more important than the camera's size. For travel, on the other hand, you probably don't want something so heavy that you are tempted to leave it back in the hotel.
In shopping for a good digital camera, the one specification that you can safely ignore is the number of pixels, which has almost nothing to do with image quality. A 3 MP camera will produce acceptable prints up to 8x10" in size. The interesting question is not the number of pixels, but their quality. Is the photo in focus? Is the high contrast and punch of a scene captured? Are the edges of objects rendered sharply? Physically larger and more expensive cameras generally do a better job at satisfying these harder-to-quantify objectives than small and cheap cameras.
The Best Digital Cameras
This review is intended to help you choose the best compact digital camera for your goals. In coming up with these recommendations for my friends, I looked carefully at Canon digital cameras (often the highest technology), Kodak digital cameras (great balance and simple user interfaces), Sony digital cameras (an alternative to Canon), and Olympus cameras, which can be good values and have some unique features such as weatherproofing.
Digital cameras fall into the following categories:
* ultra compact: good for slipping into a pocket or purse, but the controls and viewfinder are very cramped
* compact: what most people buy, reasonably pocketable, reasonably easy to control
* creative compact: more features and options than "compact", $200 more expensive; good for techno-junkies
* SLR-like: chunky, easy to control with fingers, larger sensors and better image qualty in low light
* SLR: large and cumbersome, best image quality, best low-light capability, best tool when you are going out specifically to take photos (covered in separate article)
[Each of these categories gets a separate section below. If you don't want to wade through this article, my current best recommendations for most people are the Fuji F30 (about $265; chunky but great for photos indoors without flash) and Olympus 720SW (about $280; waterproof and very compact)]
Decide if you're buying a camera to carry with you all the time, and therefore it must be compact, or if you're buying a camera that you will take out when you are specifically engaged in a photographic project. If you only use a camera during your child's soccer game, for example, the responsiveness and controllability are much more important than the camera's size. For travel, on the other hand, you probably don't want something so heavy that you are tempted to leave it back in the hotel.
In shopping for a good digital camera, the one specification that you can safely ignore is the number of pixels, which has almost nothing to do with image quality. A 3 MP camera will produce acceptable prints up to 8x10" in size. The interesting question is not the number of pixels, but their quality. Is the photo in focus? Is the high contrast and punch of a scene captured? Are the edges of objects rendered sharply? Physically larger and more expensive cameras generally do a better job at satisfying these harder-to-quantify objectives than small and cheap cameras.
Powered by Yahoo! Answers

Title Post: any suggestions for good waterproof digital camera?
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
Rating: 100% based on 99998 ratings. 5 user reviews.
Author: Unknown
Thanks For Coming To My Blog
No comments:
Post a Comment