jimhaleyscomet wrote:I can not tell you the best camera...however...beware of any camera with a tiny lense. In photography you need a fair amount of glass to get in enough light. A tiny credit card camera with a tiny lense is going to take lousy pictures except when you have a ton of light (like outside) even if it has 8 or 10 megapixels.
riverrailfan wrote:I wouldn't touch a digital with less than 10x zoom.
I find it hard to believe that a 12-millimeter-diameter lens lets in "the exact same amount of light" as a 67.5-millimeter-diameter lens. What happens to all those extra photons that hit the extra glass of the larger lens? They wind up on the proportionately larger sensor. For the same sensor performance, that results in 32 times as strong a signal as on the smaller sensor. The lenses have been getting smaller not because size doesn't matter but because sensors have been getting more efficient.
If lens size were not important, the astronomers who have been putting the largest-diameter mirrors they can afford into their telescopes are on the wrong track.
Bob Nelson
Here's my real hi-tech camera I've had since I was a kid. Can I still get film for it ? !!
Thanks, John
Ben, you said that, "Considering both equation for F-stops and the short focal lengths of most digital camera lenses, you can see how it's possible to still have a tiny lens on a digital camera that still lets in a lot of light." But, as you make the lens diameter smaller, keeping the field of view, the focal length, and the image size the same, you lose light in proportion to the square of the lens diameter. In fact, for any particular field of view and resolution, the light available for each pixel is proportional to the square of lens diameter, however realized with respect to sensor size and focal length.
Astronomers use long focal lengths because they're working with big mirrors, not the other way around. In fact, it is perfectly easy to make a small mirror with an arbitrarily long focal length. The long focal length of a big mirror makes no difference in an image seen through an proportionately long-focal-length eyepiece (or instrument). There is no practical reason for resolution better than the 1-arc-second ballpark for a conventional terrestrial telescope, which is about the best "seeing" that can be hoped for; so magnification of the image is not a goal.
I've bought a simple and sturdy camera that fits in a pocket. Simply because everyone has to be able to use it and it shouldn't give too much problems using it. Even then there was a huge amount to choose from. Next I went to some photoshops and asked a few testpics of the camera's I wanted to know better. Luckily the person selling the stuff worked previously as salesman for one of the bigger companies.
About all pocket camera's are technically equal as far as hardware goes. Even the really cheap ones have rather good lenses and sensors, but the ones more expensive work with a library of settings. A professional photographer made with the exact same hardware photo's of (up to 900) different light, atmospheric and distantial subjects, picked the perfect ones out and stored the settings of them on a chip. When you make a picture, and everything is on automatic, the camera compares your image with the library and uses the settings in it to make the picture. It automatically flashes if that gives a better result. For a small, lightweight pocketcamera 10x optical zoom is rubbish. Even with 3x optical zoom you need a tripod to keep the photo sharp, simply because it's lightweight and small.
I normally shut off the automatic pilot, because I'm used to do it the oldfashionned way, but the camera itself, without me interferring, makes much better pictures.
Eventually I choose the Rollei da5324, with 5 meg. pixel and 3x optical zoom because it's built more sturdy then the others and because it takes normal AA batteries, so you don't have to stop photographing when the battery is empty. Every shop has new ones.
It has been on holiday in a bag on the back of the motorbike, my daughter even took it with her to school (without permission, so she was grounded..) it has been in the dashboard of a car in hot sunny day's etc, but it workes great and spits out very nice images/ films with sound.
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