Thursday, February 27, 2014

Which one of these 2 cameras should I buy?




StrangeMuf


1. Olympus FE-46


2.Samsung ES25

here are the links :

1.http://www.olympus.ro/consumer/29_digital-camera_fe-46_21915.htm#

2.http://www.samsung.com/in/consumer/camera-camcorder/digital-camera/compact/EC-ES25ZZBABIN/index.idx?pagetype=prd_detail&tab=specification



Answer
I would suggest
1)Olympus FE-46 12MP Digital Camera Blue Crayola Kit with 5x Optical Zoom and 2.7 inch LCD and Black Case, 64 pack of Crayons and Storage Box
*5x optical zoom; 12-megapixel resolution for photo-quality prints up to 20 x 30 inches
*6 months access to ColorMe; enhance images online
*AF Tracking technology; choose from three in-camera Magic Filters
*2.7-inch LCD; Edit images in-camera; Red-Eye Fix, Lighting Fix, Resizing and Cropping
*Capture images to xD-Picture Card or microSD (not included)
http://www.amazon.com/Olympus-Digital-Blue-Crayola-Kit/dp/B002PMV3YI/?tag=bdd-linking-001-20

2)Nikon Coolpix L22 12.1MP Digital Camera with 3.6x Optical Zoom and 3.0-Inch LCD (Red-primary)
*12.0 megapixels for stunning prints as large as 16 x 20 inches
*3.6x Zoom-NIKKOR glass lens (37mm to 134mm); bright 3.0-inch LCD
*Easy Auto Mode with Scene Auto Selector; capture 640 x 480 movies with sound at 30fps
*3-way VR Image Stabilization System
*EXPEED Image Processing; Smart Portrait System
http://www.amazon.com/Nikon-Coolpix-L22-3-0-Inch-Red-primary/dp/B0034XIL60/?tag=bdd-linking-001-20

3)Canon PowerShot SX20IS 12.1MP Digital Camera with 20x Wide Angle Optical Image Stabilized Zoom and 2.5-inch Articulating LCD
* High-powered 20x wide-angle optical zoom with Optical Image Stabilizer
* Capture 720p HD movies with stereo sound; HDMI output connector for easy playback on your HDTV
* 2.5-inch Vari-Angle System LCD; improved Smart AUTO intelligently selects from 22 predefined shooting situations
* DIGIC 4 Image Processor; 12.1-megapixel resolution for poster-size, photo-quality prints
* Powered by AA batteries (included); capture images to SD/SDHC memory cards (not included)
http://www.amazon.com/Canon-PowerShot-SX20-prosumer-supported/dp/B002LITT3I/?tag=bdd-linking-001-20

4)Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens (Black)
*12.2-megapixel CMOS sensor captures enough detail for poster-size, photo-quality prints
*Large 3.0-inch LCD display; includes Canon's EF-S 18-55mm, f3.5-5.6 IS zoom lens
*DIGIC III image processor provides fast, accurate image processing; improved Autofocus and framing rate
*EOS Integrated Cleaning system, plus Dust Delete Data Detection in included software
*Stores images on SD/SDHC memory cards (not included)
http://www.amazon.com/Canon-Digital-Camera-18-55mm-3-5-5-6/dp/B0012YA85A/?tag=bdd-linking-001-20

what is the equivalent of 300dps to megapixel?




suqqir





Answer
I presume you mean "dpi" or dots per inch.

There isn't an "equivalent" between dpi and megapixels.

Instead, you have to do some math between the size of your print, the number of pixels horizontally and vertically, and the dpi output of your printer. And even then, the printer driver will do some interpolation as well.

Example: Let's say you want an 8" x 12" print at the printer's native 300 dpi. In fact, that would be an image that's (8"x300dpi) by (12"x300dpi) or 2400 x 3600.

When you multiply 2400 x 3600, you get 8,640,000 total dots or 8.64 million dots. Now, this is where many people tell you that you'd need an 8.64 megapixel camera to get this. However, this is not correct.

The reality is that pixels and printer dots per inch are not equivalent. Moreover, printer drivers interpolate because rarely does the math come out so nicely. Many images look just fine at 150 to 200 pixels per inch (a different measurement than dots per inch, by the way).

Bottom line: Any camera six megapixels or better will give you prints that are just fine, up to any reasonable or popularly printed size.

A second example: let's say you want a commonly sized 4" x 6" print at 300 dpi. That's (4"x300dpi) x (6"x300dpi) = 1200 x 1800. That's 2.16 million dots. So theoretically, a 2.1 megapixel camera is what you'd need to achieve that. Again, you can actually get by with less than that with real cameras; even a 1.3 megapixel camera should be able to make an acceptable 4x6" print with good printer drivers.




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