Showing posts with label 16 megapixel camera 4gb card. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 16 megapixel camera 4gb card. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Which one should I but the Samsung Galaxy S2 with 8mp Camera or a Samsung Nexus with a 5mp Camera?

16 megapixel camera 4gb card
 on Samsung WB101 16 Megapixel 26x Zoom Bridge Camera with 4GB SD Card ...
16 megapixel camera 4gb card image



FS


I'd like to know if the Nexus has other features that make up for the inferior camera resolution since it's a few months newer than the Galaxy S2.
Thanks Andrew, I'm intrigued about the FM Radio, are you sure about that feature?



Answer
A-Get Samsung Galaxy S II:
Features of the Samsung Galaxy S2 include:
8 megapixel camera with LED flash, autofocus, face detection, smile shot and 4x digital zoom
Full HD video recording (Up to 1080p)
Display: Super AMOLED Plus, 16 million colours, 480 x 800 pixels (4.3 inches) capacitive touchscreen with auto-rotate
music player
Stereo FM radio with RDS
MP3 & WAV ringtones
Integrated handsfree speaker
AGPS with geo-tagging and Google Maps
Messaging: SMS, MMS, instant messaging, email
Personal organiser functions
Document editor (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, PDF)
Memory: 16GB plus 4GB MicroSD memory card (up to 32GB)
Connectivity: Dual channel Wi-Fi, Bluetooth 3.0, USB 2.0, 3.5mm audio jack, DLNA, TV-Out, NFC
Internet: Layar Reality Browser, Chrome-Lite web browser with Flash support, GPRS, EDGE, 3G, HSPA (21 Mbps download)
Quadband GSM (850/900/1800/1900), dual band 3G (900/2100)
Size: 125 x 66 x 8.5 mm
Weight: 116g
Battery: 1650mAh battery

Which Memory card should I get for my DSLR when recording video?




Rebel Alli


I received a Canon Rebel T4i/650d as a gift and I want to use it mainly for taking video. I want to avoid getting the error "movie recording has stopped automatically" since my friends have encountered it. What SD Card should I buy? What size, how many MBs, what class and does the brand matter? Also could you explain why the error happens? Is it because of the camera's sensor,battery or does it stop recording solely because of the memory card?


Answer
I agree with Jim A about SDHC Class 10 - preferably with a high write speed like the Sandisk Extreme cards. I disagree about using multiple cards. What's the point of splitting your video over 2 smaller cards. If one card fails you've only got 1/2 a video, which is pretty much useless. SD cards do fail, so it's good to have a backup, but I've never had one fail on me yet. If you are that concerned about failure take a hard drive backup device with you.

The difference in cost between 8GB, 16GB and 32GB means I rarely buy less than 16GB these days and usually 32GB. The combination of raw files and video can fill a 16GB card pretty quickly.

For video I wouldn't use a DSLR anyway. A proper camcorder would give you proper power-zoom which no DSLR can do. It would also be less likely to record camera noises such as AF. The AF on camcorders is usually smoother and faster and doesn't hunt as much. DSLRs are really not the best tool for shooting video. Why spend out on a 16 megapixel sensor when 1080p only needs 2MP?

Most DSLRs won't allow you to video for more than 30 minutes without a break whatever card you use. First of all the file systems on the cards are 32bit, so don't allow more than 4GB in a single file. Secondly there seems to be a lot of speculation that there are additional EU import duties if the camera can record more than about 30 minutes in a single go because then it is treated as a video camera. The third thing is keeping a sensor live for that length of time can cause overheat problems. Most top-end DSLRs can cope with that but cheaper ones may restrict maximum record length even further to ensure it's not a problem.




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Monday, November 25, 2013

How many pictures does a 4GB memory card hold?

16 megapixel camera 4gb card
 on Sony Cyber Shot DSC HX7V 16 2 MP Camera 4GB SD Card Bundle | eBay
16 megapixel camera 4gb card image



Sean


I have a Kodak m380 black digital camera, with a 256MB memory card. It can only hold 120 photos, and I want to be able to hold a lot of photos. I heard 4GB holds a lot, but I just wanted to make sure before buying one, how much it actually holds. It's a 10.2 megapixel camera, and it's format, or whatever it's called, is jpg.

Thanks!



Answer
4GB is 16 times bigger than a 256mb card. Doing the math you should be able to hold roughly 2000 pictures. based on the 256 holding 120 photos

How many pictures can a 16 megapixel camera store on a 4GB card?




bruvvamoff





Answer
350-500 at JPG fine, or large, or whatever they call it in that camera.

Significantly more with higher compression, although that is not a good way to use the camera.




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Monday, October 28, 2013

Which Memory card should I get for my DSLR when recording video?

16 megapixel camera 4gb card
 on Combo of Nikon Coolpix L26 16.1 MP Digital Camera with 4GB Memory Card ...
16 megapixel camera 4gb card image



Rebel Alli


I received a Canon Rebel T4i/650d as a gift and I want to use it mainly for taking video. I want to avoid getting the error "movie recording has stopped automatically" since my friends have encountered it. What SD Card should I buy? What size, how many MBs, what class and does the brand matter? Also could you explain why the error happens? Is it because of the camera's sensor,battery or does it stop recording solely because of the memory card?


Answer
I agree with Jim A about SDHC Class 10 - preferably with a high write speed like the Sandisk Extreme cards. I disagree about using multiple cards. What's the point of splitting your video over 2 smaller cards. If one card fails you've only got 1/2 a video, which is pretty much useless. SD cards do fail, so it's good to have a backup, but I've never had one fail on me yet. If you are that concerned about failure take a hard drive backup device with you.

The difference in cost between 8GB, 16GB and 32GB means I rarely buy less than 16GB these days and usually 32GB. The combination of raw files and video can fill a 16GB card pretty quickly.

For video I wouldn't use a DSLR anyway. A proper camcorder would give you proper power-zoom which no DSLR can do. It would also be less likely to record camera noises such as AF. The AF on camcorders is usually smoother and faster and doesn't hunt as much. DSLRs are really not the best tool for shooting video. Why spend out on a 16 megapixel sensor when 1080p only needs 2MP?

Most DSLRs won't allow you to video for more than 30 minutes without a break whatever card you use. First of all the file systems on the cards are 32bit, so don't allow more than 4GB in a single file. Secondly there seems to be a lot of speculation that there are additional EU import duties if the camera can record more than about 30 minutes in a single go because then it is treated as a video camera. The third thing is keeping a sensor live for that length of time can cause overheat problems. Most top-end DSLRs can cope with that but cheaper ones may restrict maximum record length even further to ensure it's not a problem.

What type of memory card do I need for me polaroid camera?




Melo


my camera is a polaroid i835,8.0 megapixels
my b-day is coming up and i want 2 take pics at my party
maybe can it be at a low price
thank u if u have any answers



Answer
At this website, http://www.dyncomputerservices.com/servlet/the-10122/Polaroid-i835-8MP-3x/Detail, it says it takes up to 4 gig sd cards, NOT an sdhc card. If I were you I'd buy this one:
http://www.flash-memory-store.com/qmemory-sd-150x-4gb.html for 16 bucks.
Check to see if you have a 32MB card in your camera now, and see if it is the same shape as the 4 gig one above. Good luck.




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