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Sigma DP1 Delay Explained

November 30th, 2007 by Photo-John

Sigma has released an official announcement about their DP1 compact digital camera. But it wasn’t released and there hasn’t been a peep about it from Sigma until now. You may recall that the DP1 was shown at PMA this past spring and the PhotographyREVIEW.com journalists were very excited about it. I considered it one of the highlights of the 2007 PMA show. It’s the first compact digital camera to use a digital SLR sensor instead of a tiny compact digital sensor. Some of us have been waiting for a camera like this for a long, long time. We remember shooting with premium 35mm point-and-shoot cameras like the Olympus Stylus Epic, Yashica T4 Super (T5), Leica Minilux, Nikon 28Ti and 35Ti, and the Contax T3. And we’ve been waiting for the digital equivalent. Sigma is the first company to address the real compact digital camera image quality issue by developing a compact camera with a digital SLR sensor.

Sigma DP1 Digital Camera

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Posted in Sigma Cameras and Lenses, Camera and Photography News, Uncategorized |No Tags | 108 visits| No Comments »


Fujifilm FinePix F50fd receives 2007 Best of What’s New award from Popular Science

November 28th, 2007 by aquadog

 

FUJIFILM FINEPIX F50fd DIGITAL CAMERA RECEIVES
2007 BEST OF WHAT’S NEW AWARD FROM POPULAR SCIENCE

Digital Camera Makes “Spontaneous Shots Look Picture-Perfect”

Valhalla, N.Y., November 28, 2007 – FUJIFILM U.S.A., Inc. is pleased to announce that Popular Science has selected the Fujifilm FinePix F50fd digital camera as the recipient of a 2007 Best of What’s New award in the Gadget category.

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Posted in Camera and Photography News |No Tags | 85 visits| No Comments »


HP Photosmart M547 Review

November 28th, 2007 by dollop

The HP Photosmart M547 is a small, entry-level digital camera ideal for beginners and non-techies. The M547 features nine fully automatic exposure modes, a 3x optical zoom and a respectable 6.2 megapixels of resolution. It also has a very affordable price tag of $100.

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HP Photosmart M547 Studio Test Images
studio_icon.jpg ISO 181 Sample >>
ISO 563 Sample >>
ISO 800 Sample >>

Hewlett-Packard Photosmart M547 - Crane

    Pros

  • Compact body
  • Simple menus
  • HP Steady Photo image stabilization
  • Good image quality
  • Video capability
  • $100 - inexpensive!
    Cons

  • Display is hard to see in sunlight
  • No manual-exposure modes
  • Can’t manually change ISO sensitivity
  • Low video frame rate
Hewlett-Packard Photosmart M547 - front and back

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Posted in Digital Camera Reviews, Uncategorized |No Tags | 2238 visits| 1 Comment »


Olympus E-3 DSLR Sample Photos Are Live!

November 27th, 2007 by Photo-John

Olympus E-3 DSLR

An Olympus E-3 DSLR review camera arrived on my doorstep on Friday morning. Not wanting to waste any time, I promptly started charging the battery so I could get the studio photo work done. The photos are all done and the camera has been passed on to photographer / journalist Laurence Chen, who did our E-510 review, among others. I think he’s a great choice for the PhotographyREVIEW.com E-3 pro review. In the meantime, all the product shots are done, as are the controlled studio sample photos. I wanted to make the sample photos available immediately, since I know there’s a lot of interest in this camera. They were shot at all ISO settings and are available at full resolution so you can compare them, print them, or evaluate them however you want. We hope to have a complete review done in the next two to three weeks.

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Posted in Olympus Cameras, Camera and Photography News, Digital Camera Reviews, Uncategorized |No Tags | 316 visits| No Comments »


DxO Optics Pro v5 Software for Windows

November 20th, 2007 by aquadog

DxO Labs Announces Immediate Availability of the
New DxO Optics Pro v5 Software for Windows

DxO Optics Pro v5 features a breakthrough RAW Engine, dust/blemish removal, improved user interface, support for the Canon EOS 40D as well as expanded Adobe Photoshop Lightroom compatibility, and an exciting new ‘Snapshot’ feature

Paris, France – November 20, 2007 – DxO Labs today announced the immediate availability of DxO Optics Pro v5 for Windows, the latest version of its award-winning flagship automatic image quality enhancement software application for Digital SLR camera users. DxO Optics Pro v5 can be purchased via download on the company’s e-store (www.dxo.com) as well as from several well known retailers (a full list of resellers is available at http://www.dxo.com/intl/photo/Resellers). DxO Optics Pro v5 for Macintosh is scheduled to be available towards the end the year. All purchasers of DxO Optics Pro v4.5 on or after August 1, 2007 are eligible for a free upgrade to DxO Optics Pro v5.

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Posted in Camera and Photography News, New Photography Products, Digital Photography Software |No Tags | 355 visits| 3 Comments »


Nikon AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55MM F/3.5-5.6G VR Lens

November 20th, 2007 by aquadog

NEW NIKON AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55MM F/3.5-5.6G VR LENS INCLUDES THE BENEFITS OF VIBRATION REDUCTION IN A COMPACT AND AFFORDABLE ZOOM

MELVILLE, N.Y. (November 19, 2007) – Nikon Inc. today introduced the new versatile AF-S DX NIKKOR 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G VR lens that offers Nikon’s proprietary Vibration Reduction (VR) technology to help consumers snap sharper photos than ever before, even while shooting handheld. Compact and lightweight, this affordable lens is an optimum lens to use with Nikon DX-format digital SLR cameras and is the ideal focal length as a “first lens” to faithfully capture life’s day-to-day moments, or a welcome addition to a Nikon D-SLR photographer’s already-established lens assortment.

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Posted in Camera and Photography News, New Photography Products |No Tags | 291 visits| No Comments »


Eye-Fi Card

November 15th, 2007 by Laurence Chen

Wireless gadgets, USB gadgets, and wireless USB gadgets generally don’t warrant a second thought, but the Eye-Fi Card is a new wireless product for casual photographers that automates the process of downloading pictures to your computer and uploading them to your photo sharing service. You shoot, it does the rest.

eye1.jpg

The Eye-Fi Card comes in SD (Secure Digital) format and is aimed at those people who don’t want to mess with cords or bother with using a card reader. In addition, the automation handles resizing the images for online use while also saving them to your computer as well.

Once you set up your Eye-Fi to work with your home wireless network and a service like Flickr (it takes about two minutes), the Eye-Fi will automatically detect and transfer JPEG files to your online account and/or your home computer whenever it’s powered on.

That’s pretty much it, but don’t forget to leave the camera on and turn off its auto-power saving function (the Eye-Fi draws its power from your camera battery). It’s that simple.

The great thing is that the software and hardware is smart enough to accommodate real-world glitches like powering down the camera during a transfer or losing your wireless signal. Both of these happened to me while testing the Eye-Fi and it simply picked up where it left off before the interruptions.

You will still have to download pictures the old-fashioned wired way if you have RAW format files or if you have movies shot with your camera on the card. Eye-Fi simply ignores these file formats. I could not test TIFFs.

The card conveniently comes with a card reader and the setup is handled by simply plugging the card and card reader into your computer’s USB slot. On my Mac, the Eye-Fi Manager application launched Firefox (you have to set Firefox or IE as your default browser, a hassle if you use something else like Safari or Camino) and started the process. Each step was well documented and you are told what is happening.

eyescrn.png

Once you’re set up, you don’t need to have the Eye-Fi Manager application running. If you do, it will show you the progress of individual pictures being transferred to your online account and/or your computer’s hard drive. If you don’t have it running, you won’t see anything if transferring online, but you will get a little pop up box and progress bar as it transfers to the hard drive. Unfortunately there is no “all done” confirmation message to remind you to turn off your camera.

A bit of detail about how Eye-Fi works: the card has a dedicated computer inside which connects to Eye-Fi’s servers over your network. At this time it apparently cannot transfer files via a public hotspot which requires signing on through a log-on page. Once connected however, Eye-Fi transfers full size files. If your online service limits the file size, no problem, Eye-Fi’s software does that for you. And as I mentioned, if your computer is off and you have Eye-Fi set up to save to the hard drive, that will happen automatically the next time your computer is online.

Here are the services that Eye-Fi works with at the time of this review:

Walmart
Vox
Shutterfly
Fotki
Phanfare
Sharpcast
SmugMug
Flickr
Snapfish
Webshots
Gallery2
dotPhoto
Typepad
Facebook
Picasa Web Albums
Kodak Gallery
Photobucket

Eye-Fi Card Benefits:
* Easy setup
* Easy use
* Smart hardware/software accommodates interruptions

Eye-Fi Card Drawbacks:
* No RAW file support
* If you need speed, you ain’t got speed (compared to card readers)
* Eye-Fi Manager has no “transfer complete” confirmation, although there are progress bars for individual pictures
* Need to keep the camera on (and turn off the camera’s auto-power off)
* Battery drain is higher with Eye-Fi than with regular SD card.
* Only one online photo service at a time

My guess is that if you’re in the product’s target market, you won’t be put off by the Eye-Fi’s disadvantages. Serious photographers, who are shooting up cards and cards full of photos won’t find this product to be of any interest. However casual snapshooters making just a couple pictures here and there may find a lot to like in this unique little gadget. If you’re one of those folks, this could be a nice little timesaver. As Joe Bob used to say, “Check it out.” Eye-Fi’s website is here at www.eye.fi.

Laurence Chen
www.lchenphoto.com

Posted in Camera Accessory Reviews, New Photography Products, Digital Photography Workflow |No Tags | 144 visits| No Comments »


Sigma 4.5mm F2.8 EX DC HSM Circular Fisheye Lens

November 14th, 2007 by aquadog

Sigma is pleased to announce the World’s first 4.5mm F2.8 EX DC HSM Circular Fisheye lens for Digital Cameras

Sigma 4.5mm F2.8 EX DC HSM Circular Fisheye lens:

  • The first 180 degree circular fisheye lens designed specifically for APS-C size digital SLR cmaeras.
  • The fast F2.8 maximum aperture making it ideal for low light photography.
  • Minimum focusing distance of only 5.3 inches(13.5 cm) and maximum magnification of 1:6.
  • Special Low Dispersion( SLD) glass minimizes color aberration.
  • Equipped with HypeSonic Motor HSM with full-time manual focus override.
  • Equisolid angle projection method is possible for art and scientific use.
  • Available for Sigma, Canon and Nikon Digital Cameras.

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Posted in Camera and Photography News, New Photography Products, Uncategorized |No Tags | 300 visits| No Comments »


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