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bikkle wrote:NeoNecroNomiCron wrote: Its really smart especialy the digital stitch function(i am so adicted to making huge panoramic shots).
Here's a panorama I took with the camera:
bikkle wrote:Canon Raises Output of Fast-Selling Kiss DigicamCanon Inc said on Monday it had raised its production capacity for its hot-selling "EOS Kiss" digital single-lens reflex (SLR) camera by about 25 percent, anticipating explosive growth in coming years.
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In what could be another headache for Nikon, Canon's Ando said a lower-priced digital SLR could be about one year away.
"If it's not this autumn, then that would probably mean next spring," Ando said, noting the release would then be one-and-a-half years after the original "EOS Kiss." "Development times are so much faster than they were in the film age."
Caustic Saint wrote:Casio Exlim EX-Z30... Very small, nice picture quality, fast to power on, lots of camera control and a wide variety of preset shooting modes.....video and voice recording mode.
Taro Toporific wrote:Caustic Saint wrote:Casio Exlim EX-Z30
K-cool and with your Card Reader, it's no muss no fuss to get photos into iBook's iPhoto (an soon iLife).
So Akinori Takahashi, of the National Institute of Polar Research in Tokyo, Japan, and his colleagues mounted tiny cameras on five Adelie penguins and five chin-strap penguins to monitor their dives off Signy Island in Antarctica.
The cameras weighed only 73 grams in air and were held on the penguin's body by a waterproof tape. They recorded over 11,000 images from 2,140 dives.
ramchop wrote:[The cameras weighed only 73 grams in air and were held on the penguin's body by a waterproof tape. They recorded over 11,000 images from 2,140 dives.
aquamarine wrote:Anyone have any suggestions on a good store to purchase a camera from?
Taro Toporific wrote:ramchop wrote:[The cameras weighed only 73 grams in air and were held on the penguin's body by a waterproof tape. They recorded over 11,000 images from 2,140 dives.
I WANT ONE to wear on the train!
A wearable camera full of sensors could help people with memory problems, according to Microsoft researchers.
The prototype SenseCam takes an instant snap every time it spots changes in movement, temperature or light.
Currently capable of storing 2,000 images on a 128MB memory card, the cam could help people record their days.
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