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2007-02-06 09:56:01 · 8 answers · asked by t3bgirl 1 in Consumer Electronics Cameras

8 answers

the picture quality...

2007-02-06 14:35:06 · answer #1 · answered by Big Bike Biker 4 · 0 0

You can judge the picture quality. You can judge the build quality. You can judge the controls and features. You can judge the battery life. You can judge lots of things. The important thing is to define benchmarks for each criteria where you say "this is good enough. Anything past "good enough" is superfluous for your own needs. Often, you find people saying "but image quality is the most important, so I have to get THE BEST image quality, when they don't realize that they couldn't differentiate between the best image quality and the 10th best image quality at the size they're printing anyways. Hence, they didn't really need THE BEST. You get the idea? To help you get a sense of what you need, save some of the full-size sample pics in the review sites and print them out the way you intend to and see if you can tell which one's better.

The second comment I'd say is that image quality is alot more complicated than "megapixels and lens." Those who tell you that's all you need to pay attention to have no idea what how pixel density plays into it, or sensor size, or in-camera image processing like noise reduction, etc. In some cameras, the failure point isn't the quality of the lens, but simply that the autofocus tends to front-focus, leading to slightly soft pictures. Their lens could be top notch, but a teeny sensor hooked up to an image processor that kills the image with noise reduction will still yield a lousy pic.

In the end, I think you'll find that if you print out your own test samples from each camera, you'll find plenty of high-quality cameras that suit your image quality needs, and you'll base most of your requirements within that set of top-notch cameras based moreso on the features provided by the camera versus the image quality.

2007-02-06 15:07:12 · answer #2 · answered by Inigo 1 · 0 0

One of your ans was correct. Picture quality. Because one camera has more megapixels than another doesn't make it a better camera. It's megapixels + quality of the lens. Look in your local library Nov '06 Consumer Reports. 4 megapixel cameras can have excellent picture quality when enlarging 8X10 than cameras with 6 megapixels. Do NOT get caught up with the megapixel war. Your first ans is dead wrong. Cameras can have 1 second delay between shots, others 6 and 7 sec delays. Now that would drive me nuts, just the waiting. Some have an image stabilizer. In general you'll come up with brands such as Sony, Fugi, Canon and Nikon for quality.

2007-02-06 15:15:42 · answer #3 · answered by Vintage Music 7 · 0 0

A digital digital camera is a digital camera that would not use movie. A dSLR is a digital digital camera with an optical viewfinder it really is coupled to the lens. The dSLR is way better expensive than a compact or element-and-shoot (PNS) digital digital camera because it has a higher digital sensor, gives you quite a number of controls (not effective factors) and is outfitted with higher and larger effective aspects. Megapixels is only a unit of degree for image length. It does not impression image high quality. that is extremely available for a PNS to take a better effective image than a dSLR if the only utilising the PNS is time-honored with of better about images than the only utilising the dSLR. image high quality relies upon better on the potential of the person. The digital camera is in hardship-free words a device. the favored device regardless of the indisputable fact that of those who understand is the dSLR.

2016-12-03 19:50:19 · answer #4 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Color staturation, sharpness, noise levels. You have to look at a camera's picture in the same exact settings to actually compare each camera. A good website is dpreview.com. They probably have one of the best testing websites I have seen.

2007-02-06 10:33:45 · answer #5 · answered by Koko 4 · 0 0

Get sample photos & compare at 100% view , it not as simple as pixel count , also sensor size design , dynamic range , pixel density , high iso preformance .

2007-02-06 10:11:50 · answer #6 · answered by smartass 3 · 0 0

pixels and what you are shooting in, I shoot in raw instead of jpeg for a better quality picture.

2007-02-06 10:43:52 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

by the amount of pixels it can take in a photograph

2007-02-06 09:58:56 · answer #8 · answered by Laurie C 1 · 0 0

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