Showing posts with label summer brand baby video monitor. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer brand baby video monitor. Show all posts

Friday, October 17, 2014

Minolta Dimage E223 2.1MP Digital Camera w/ 3x Optcial Zoom

Minolta Dimage E223 2.1MP Digital Camera w/ 3x Optcial ZoomI wanted a basic starter digital camera and I also own a minolta 35mm, so I knew that it would probably be a good buy. It had all the features I needed. It takes good pictures, but of course not as good as my 35mm minolta. The only negative things about it is the startup speed and battery life, which was solved by getting NiMH rechargeable batteries.

Thought I would get my son an actual camera rather than those awful "kid" cameras with zero features, and this would save an older camera from a landfill, right? Well luckily I bought this way ahead of Christmas completely failed... all images, pictures and video were just a red haze, like a martian nightmare.

Vendor was very nice and prompt about the refund, though, which saved this from being a complete disaster. Found a cheap (about $7 more than this one) new camera, 5MP. Again, light on features, but whatever, it's for a kid.

Buy Minolta Dimage E223 2.1MP Digital Camera w/ 3x Optcial Zoom Now

This is my first Digital camera and I had purchased it off my brother who bought it a few days ago but I've been begging for a Digital camera so he sold me this one. I enjoy the fact that it's a Camera and Camcorder but I agree with the first message it is a bit slow to save the picture and get ready for the next picture to be taken. I'm going to use this camera for the first time at my trip to Magic Mountain this Saturday so we'll see how good of pictures it takes. We're going to be there until dark so I'll be able to see how well this camera takes pictures both in the dark and daylight. I'll get back to you on the results. But overall I think this camera is good for a person who's going digital for the first time. Pretty simple to use and pretty nice style. I think it's worth your money. But shop around a little first.

Read Best Reviews of Minolta Dimage E223 2.1MP Digital Camera w/ 3x Optcial Zoom Here

This digital camera stinks--buy something else

1. Eats up batteries more than anything, more than any digi camera i've dealt with.

2. Delay between pictures sucks.

3. The thing doesn't even turn on anymore (new batteries too!)....

4. Pictures are good, but after taking two pictures, the battery is dead.

5. The picture screen stinks, not very sharp.

Save your money, folks.

Want Minolta Dimage E223 2.1MP Digital Camera w/ 3x Optcial Zoom Discount?

Monday, September 1, 2014

Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens - Black

Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens - BlackMy journey with DSLRs began back in 2003 with the original Digital Rebel. DSLRs changed my photography for the better like nothing else. Five years and some 25,000 shots later, it's still going strong. Along the way I upgraded to the Canon 30D, which is a fantastic camera as well. When the 40D was announced, I decided to wait until the 50D sometime in 2009, but wanted a newer backup/second body for my photography needs. So when the XSi/450D was announced, it sounded like a perfect fit for my needs.

I got it from Amazon.com three days ago, and have given it a pretty good workout since then, having shot about 650 shots under a variety of shooting conditions and with a number of different Canon and third-party lenses. The following are my impressions.

The build feels very good. The camera feels wonderfully light yet well built. I'm 6ft tall with average size hands, and the camera feels good in my hand. The battery grip, to me, defeats the purpose of having a small, light DSLR, so I opted for a Hakuba/Opteka grip (it's a plate that screws into the tripod socket that enables you to use the excellent Canon E1 hand strap with it) and I couldn't be happier. I'm not a fan of neck straps, so this works well for me (see the uploaded photo for the configuration).

Most of the menu buttons on the back feel different from the ones on the original Digital Rebel and the 30D; the XSi buttons feel more tactile and have a definite "click" to them when you press them. The exception are the Exposure Lock (*) and AF selector buttons, which have retained the deeper, softer feel of the older cameras. Just different, not better or worse, for me.

The LCD is now 3" with 230K pixels. The playback images look great, and probably because of the higher resolution of the sensor, there's a very slight delay when you zoom in to 10x while the image loads and displays properly. People coming from other cameras or brands might not even notice it--I only did so because of the difference between it and my two other Canon DSLRs (which have lower resolution sensors). The viewing angle of the LCD screen (how clearly you can see the screen from side and up and down) is excellent; you can still see the screen holding the camera almost straight up for an overhead shot (more on this later). I'd estimate the viewing angle is about 160-170 degrees both horizontally and vertically.

The Digital Rebel has a separate status screen above the main LCD screen, and the 30D had one on top of the camera, so I wasn't sure if I was going to like the big LCD acting as the status screen and no top screen. I'm happy to say that this arrangement works well, at least for me. The back screen makes it really easy to take all the settings at a glance. The viewfinder is much larger and brighter than that in the Digital Rebel. A humongously welcome feature for me is the always displayed ISO value in the viewfinder.

The camera is only 1/2 of the image quality equation, the other being the lenses being used. Coupled with my favorite lens, the Canon EF 70-200mm f/4 L telephoto lens, the XSi turns out fantastic images. The supplied kit lens is very light and compact for being an image stabilized lens, and turns out good performance. The IS is certainly very useful.

Two features that used to be missing from the Digital Rebels and found in the more expensive DSLRs are now featured in the XSi: spot-metering and flash exposure compensation (these may have been available in the previous Digital Rebel model, the XTi, as well). The inclusion of those two features make the camera a much more complete and compelling photographic tool. The timer function now has a custom mode, where it'll count down from 10 seconds then take a number of shots (specified by you) in succession. No more running back and forth to reset the timer after each shot! There's also the traditional 2-second timer.

Let's talk for a minute about sensor and the ISO values. XSi/450D has five ISO values you can choose: 100 (best image quality), 200, 400, 800, and 1600. Higher ISO increases the camera sensor's sensitivity to light, thus you can achieve faster shutter speeeds for a given lighting condition. However, the trade-off is that the sensor "noise" (think grain for film photography) increases with higher ISO, so you get a degraded image quality in return for less blurred photos from hand shakes (thanks to faster shutter speed). This may come in handy in situations where flash photography is not permitted, such as a museum or a concert or theater. HOWEVER, compared to point-and-shoot digital cameras, the larger sensors of DSLRs, including the XSi, means that even at ISO 800 and 1600 you get very usable images right out of the camera. Running the images shot at those ISO settings through any number of third-party noise reduction software will improve them even further.

This ties in to another very useful feature of the XSi/450D that makes life easier for the photographer: The Auto ISO function. By default, Auto ISO sets the ISO (the sensor sensitivity to light) between 100 and 800 (by using custom functions, this can be changed to 200-1600). If you are, for example, shooting your kid's indoor basketball game and you know that you need a shutter speed of at least 1/200 sec to "freeze" the action, then you can set the camera to Tv (shutter priority mode) and set the value to 1/200, and set the camera to Auto ISO. Then the camera will match the aperture and the ISO to achieve proper exposure at that shutter speed. With my other DSLRs, setting the camera to shutter priority only allowed the camera to adjust the aperture value; ISO setting had to be adjusted manually. With the XSi/450D, the ability for the camera to adjust the ISO value automatically makes it one less thing for you the photographer to worry about.

I've only tested the Live View function to see how it works, but I can already see how useful it's going to be in studio and macro shootings. Just a note, you can't half-press the shutter to autofocus while in Live View mode. You can either manual focus, or use one of the two autofocus methods, quick (the mirror flips up, the LCD goes dark for a short while, and flips down with focus locked) or live (the camera uses the LCD's contrast detection to achieve the focus--this method is slower than the quick method), both by pressing the exposure lock button (*) while in the Live View mode. Using either the RS-60E3 wired remote or RC-1 wireless remote in Live View mode will ONLY trigger the shutter, and has no bearing on focusing.

Some people seem to be under the impression that the inclusion of the Live View feature will enable them to use the XSi/450D as they do point-and-shoot digital cameras, to compose their shots. That is not the case. You can't really make a functioning use of the Live View feature unless the camera's securely mounted on a tripod or on a flat surface. Both Live View focusing modes, while precise, are too slow to be used for hand-held shooting.

Having said that, there is one use of Live View in hand-held shooting that I've come to value. When shooting overhead or over an obstacle, I can, with the same hand holding the camera, trigger the Live View, compose the scene through the LCD monitor (even if it's out of focus, it's easy to get the general framing right), disable Live View, and take the photo normally. With a little practice, this can be accomplished very quickly. Very handy when you're just holding the camera overhead and hoping for the best.

The Direct Print button that's been much ridiculed and maligned in most Canon cameras now double as the white balance menu button. The Set button in the middle of the four-direction arrow keys can be programmed for a number of different functions: Change image quality, flash exposure compensation, LCD monitor on/off (same as Display button, but can be triggered by the same hand holding the camera), and Menu display (again, can be triggered by the same hand holding the camera).

There is a dedicated ISO button, which is also very welcome. It can easily be accessed during shooting with the right thumb, thereby minimizing the interruption to shooting.

The battery life seems very good. I've shot about 500+ shots on a single charge and the status monitor is still showing charge at full.

I'm using Transcend 8GB Class 6 SDHC card with it. At ISO 100, the camera reports it can fit 396 RAW+JPG (highest quality) on it, but in reality it can probably fit about 420-450 (the camera's always conservative when estimating). With RAW only, it can fit 507. With highest quality JPG, it can fit 1,822. Note that as ISO increases, so do the file sizes and thus you can store less images per card. For example, on ISO 1600, the same card can only hold 323 images, compared to 396 at ISO 100.

My only gripe, and this is more about me than the camera, is the RAW+JPG buffer. I always shoot RAW+JPG, and the buffer will only hold four images at that speed (this is a limitation that's built into the camera's memory buffer system, and thus using a fast memory card doesn't help--see p.64 of the manual). When the buffer's full, you can take two additional images at about a frame a second, then have to wait until the buffer empties (finishes writing to the memory card). When shooting RAW only, it's 6 images. When shooting JPG only, then it's no problem at more than 50 frames. I've found myself switching the mode dial to Sports mode when I'm shooting a fast-moving subject and the buffer simply can't keep up with it. Well, that's why Canon produces different grades and ranges of DSLRs.

I've uploaded some photos that I shot of the local wildlife. Most if not all of those were taken with the EF 70-200mm f/4 L lens.

All in all, it's a fantastic camera. Pretty amazing to see how far the entry-level DSLRs have come in just a few years in terms of features, interface, ergonomics, and quality. I'm very pleased with my purchase and intend to have lots of fun shooting pictures with it.

I have had the XSi for about 3 months now and I am thouroughly impressed with it. This is my first DSLR and I was a little wary about going with a brand-new and untested camera, but I have always like Canon (I used an ELAN II in High School and I bought a SD600 about 2 years ago to take snapshots of my son). Overall, I have not been disappointed with the quality of the photos that the XSi produces. The IS lens works great and I have taken some pretty amazing photos (for me at least). I do have just a couple of issues, both good and bad, that I think those who are looking at buying this may want to know.

Battery life -Great battery life. I should say, AMAZING battery life. I have taken over 5000 photos and I have only had to charge the battery twice.

Live View -LiveView is not for beginners. It is not a replacement for your Point-and-Shoot. You can't use it in the AUTO mode (Green Square). This isn't that big of a deal for me, I prefer full manual myself, but the whole point of this feature, I thought, was to make it more user friendly for the Point-and-Shoot photographer. My wife can't use Live View in it's current form (I specifically bought a DSLR with a live view function so she could still use the camera). So, if Live View is a big selling point for you, You may want to look at some others (If it isn't that big of a deal to you, then this is still an amazing camera -added 4-23-2008). If you do studio work, though, you can hook the camera up to your PC and use it as a remote viewer. But it is not a point-and-shoot camera in Live View. In my earlier review, I said that it would be nice if Canon fixed some of the Live View issues with a firmware update, I was mistaken. Live View is a nice feature once you figure out it is not meant for beginners. Studio and landscape photographers will find Live View a great tool.

Image Quality -I have had some great success shooting in a studio setting as well as some great outdoor shots. In the studio, I used tungsten "hot" lights with the subjuect against a white background. The photos turned out great. Skin tones are perfect and there is very little, if any, chromatic abberation at the edges. It shoots great outdoor shots as well. We just got into beekeeping and I was able to get some AMAZING shots of our bees up-close outdoors. The bees looked dirty and not very interesting from a distance, but the macro photos I got up close are beautiful and full of wonderfully crisp details. The lens is a little short, the image quality you get from it is pretty good considering it only costs $100. I do plan on buying a longer lens in the near future.

Overall, the camera is solid and feels nice in the hand. It isn't too heavy, yet still feels sturdy. If you can afford the higher price, I don't think you will be disappointed. If you can't, the XTi is still a great camera. And if you can afford to wait a few months for the price to drop a little (LIKE IT ALREADY HAS!!) I would. I was able to work a few extra weekends so I could afford to get this, and I can tell you, I don't mind it a bit, because the quality of photos I am getting has been totally worth it.

--Update ---

I was incorrect when I said you couldn't use the 9-Point autofocus in Live View. You can use the 9-point autofocus while in Live View, but the mirror flips down and focuses so you can't see what you are trying to focus on until after the camera has actually gone through the autofocus process.

--Update #2 ---

I have now had this camera for almost two months and I am happy to report that the more I use it, the more I love it. Once you learn the layout of the camera and you load the MyMenu with the tools you use most often, the camera becomes an absolute delight to use. I have taken over 5000 photos with it so far and now I need an extra hard drive to put them all on.

I was able to rent a Canon EF 24-105 IS L lens and a 580 EX II Speedlite for my sister's wedding. WOW! What great photos. The camera interfaced with the flash flawlessly and I am more convinced than ever that much of the quality of your photos comes from the glass you use and not as much from the camera itself (I think it is about 65% lens to 35% camera body give or take a few points-I know there will be those who disagree, but that is my take on it, and I am sure if I had a 1Ds MkIII I would think that there wasn't a peice of glass good enough for my camera).

This is a great beginner dSLR and a great camera all around. I am very happy with my purchase and I have had no regrets whatsoever about spending the $900 to buy such a great tool. Amazon now sells it for $799, you can't go wrong at that price!

Buy Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens - Black Now

This camera is impossible to beat at this price. I won't write a lengthy review, but, you can set this camera in fully automatic mode and hand it to a "point and shoot" person, and they will obtain fantastic results. For the amateur photographer, this has all of the bells and whistles, what I love is I can reset the camera rapidly for multiple shots of the same scene on very different settings. Married with a decent photo program on your computer, it is possible to achieve professional results.

Many reviews say, get this with the stabilization lens.... I wholeheartedly agree... the extra $100 is a bargain price for this lens... It is almost (and I do say almost) like having a tripod. I set the camera for 1/10th second exposures with no support, and obtained steady pictures with it, slower than this, and the stabilization did not fully correct for any unsteadiness.

We'd buy it again in a heartbeat, and I wish I could get one for everyone I know!! Best photos that I have ever taken and a joy to use! Connecting it to the computer and downloading photos takes a matter of seconds.

Get the largest SD card you can afford with it... We have a 2GB card with it, and it fills fairly rapidly. 1GB is far too small for this camera (primarily because you will take numerous shots with it, not because the pics take up a great deal of memory), I'm guessing 4GB would be near perfect (or a couple of 2GB cards, but one 4GB is safer, the cards are too easy to misplace).

Read Best Reviews of Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens - Black Here

I picked up this camera two weeks ago at a local store. Overall, it's a solid camera. Color reproduction is wonderful, it's quick, low noise with high iso, and terrific macros. The camera is blazing fast. Please refer to the other posters for the good points of this camera.

Now i'll discuss the shortcomings. The major one, which has been referenced to in various forums such as dpreview and a few online review sites is poor AutoFocus. Not all cameras are affected, but mine was. If you shoot at an object from w/in 10 ft, it has trouble over 50% of the time picking up the autofocus point and often selects the wrong point. If you use center focus, it gets pretty close but final image is still a bit blurry. It becomes a bit sharper w/ the live view autofocus system. When I took some outdoor pics of some animals, i couldn't quite lock on what i was interested in. Even when taking shots of people outside w/ a prominent background, it seems to have trouble deciding if it wants to focus on the person or the background. I'd say that 20% of my shots were actually in focus and those look wonderful. The remaining ones had the focus off. So i'm gonna send my camera to canon for repair. I went to best buy and tried out a 40D and the focus was rock solid. If you get a good camera, kodus to u.

Want Canon Digital Rebel XSi 12.2 MP Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens - Black Discount?

The XSi is a significant step forward for Canon, and brings features to the upper end of the consumer market that were previously only seen in much more expensive professional equipment.

The most important reasons I like this camera are:

1. The kit lens (EF-S 18-55 f/3.5-5.6 IS) is very good for the price. It is as sharp as lenses costing $700 to $1,000 and has only minimally greater barrel distortion and no vignetting to speak of. There is a little bit more chromatic aberration than with more expensive lenses, but again it completely acceptable, especially for the price. The autofocus and image stabilization work reliably and quickly. For aficionados of professional grade lenses, the build will seem light, but a light and small lens is also easier to carry around. Overall, a big improvement over earlier Canon kit lenses.

2. The 12.2 megapixel sensor provides more than enough resolution. Even 8"x12" enlargements are highly satisfactory. We can look forward to the day when consumer-priced 35mm SLRs will have 30 megapixel full size sensors. At that point, the 35mm format will be maxed out in terms of resolution, as the lenses will not be able to keep up. In the meantime, this is as good as it gets. To give you an idea how good, on a shot of a 25 story building, every brick was clearly visible.

3. The camera is fast enough for essentially all non-professional use. With natural lighting (no flash) it shoots 3.5 frames per second, perfect for capturing kids or sports action.

4. Another great feature of the XSi is that it has all the manual controllability that advanced photographers want, but also has automatic modes that even a complete beginner can easily use. The performance of the preset automatic modes is surprisingly good under a wide range of conditions.

Having only had the XSi for a few weeks, I cannot yet say anything about the reliability of this new model. What I can report is that in more than 30 years of photography, I have found Canon products, both SLR and point and shoot, to be by far the most reliable. The Nikon, Olympus, and Pentax cameras I once owned have long since fallen by the wayside, but every Canon I have ever had, all the way back to a 1978 35 mm AT-1 SLR, is still going strong.

Tuesday, August 19, 2014

Professional Hard LCD Screen Protector for Nikon D3100 / D3000 Digital SLR Camera

Professional Hard LCD Screen Protector for Nikon D3100 / D3000 Digital SLR CameraFits perfectly in Nikon D3100. First you need to remove the rubber eyecup that comes in the viewfinder of your camera to attach this protector. I thought it could may distort the image, but you can see it just fine. It's made of some kind of plastic and keep your LCD safe from scratches, impacts and cheek contact. I loved my purchase and I feel safe now when showing pics to those who likes to touch the screen.

Fist perfectly on my nikon 3100. good buy to protect screen from sweat or scratches. recomended for all users. g

Buy Professional Hard LCD Screen Protector for Nikon D3100 / D3000 Digital SLR Camera Now

This screen protector is the hard shell, solid, thick plastic type like those found on the D80 and D90.

I have a D90 also and I wanted my D3000 to have a protector like that. This fits the bill.

It stays on pretty well and offers solid protection. I like the look as well.

Read Best Reviews of Professional Hard LCD Screen Protector for Nikon D3100 / D3000 Digital SLR Camera Here

This screen protector is great for protecting my camera LCD from scratches and smudges. Only down side is the eye piece does not stay in place very well. Overall I am happy to have this.

Want Professional Hard LCD Screen Protector for Nikon D3100 / D3000 Digital SLR Camera Discount?

Should be standard it was on my D200. This camera was purchased as a gift and the screen is even larger and I would assume more prone to damage. Get this and don't worry about it. Its easy to clean, clear, and is easily worth the price paid

Tuesday, April 15, 2014

Minolta Dimage 7 5MP Digital Camera w/ 7x Optical Zoom

Minolta Dimage 7 5MP Digital Camera w/ 7x Optical ZoomI like this camera. I'm what I call a professional amateur with lots of cameras. I've been taking pictures for 36 years with several different point and shoot, seven different Nikons, the Hasselblad 500 C/M, and now with a handful of digital. I've used an original Casio (

Saturday, April 5, 2014

Konica Minolta X60 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Konica Minolta X60 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical ZoomI've had this baby for a few days and have not fully tested it out yet but so far, its beautiful. It's tiny and, above all, really easy to use. Unlike my previous 5 MP digicam, the Sony DP-10, which had a gaggle of complicated features and was had a learning curve to take good pictures, the X60's operations are intuitive. The manual is available and really easy to understand too if you need to read it.

Pros:

Small, compact, truly a purse camera if you wanted. Others that claim to be small aren't really but this one is!

Fast start up. Just slide the cover and it's on.

Easy to operate

Good picture quality

Nice big LCD screen

Covered lens

Internal 15MB memory

Cons.

No viewfinder (Not like I use that anyway)

Zoom is only standard.

I've heard that the LCD in previous models in this line are fragile. I've had no problems so far but you're not supposed to drop a digicam anyway.

My first digicam was a minolta 3.2 MP which I lose in Kyoto and I'm glad I went back to a brand I like.

I had the Konica Minolta X50 (see my review on it), which ended up being defective after about 9 months of normal, delicate use. The battery cover wouldn't stay shut anymore, so back to Costco it went.

After researching the "ultra-compact" cameras in the 5.0mp and above class, I found that the minor improvements of the x60, coupled with the larger LCD display and lower price made it the most appealing digital "ultra" compact in the entire category. I mean I put it up against Sony's DSC T-1/T-7/and T-3, Kodak's new EasyShare V-50, Casio's Exilim Z750 and EX-S500, Fuji's FinePix Z1, Olympus, and Pentax Optio.

It came out the winner. I'll give it 1 year of use and revisit my review to give another update.

In the meantime, if compact is what you're looking for, this camera will meet those objectives plus take excellent snap shots in well lit close range situations.

The only thing that remains to be a weak point, is the poor flash range and the poor resolution of pictures in low-light situations. If you're taking night photos, you need to be within the 6 feet and in an area where you're picking up some light, otherwise your subject shot will come out blurry, out of focus, or over exposed.

Buy Konica Minolta X60 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom Now

After purchased two little Canon SD200 cameras for my daughters, I decided to upgrade my own bulky first generation HP camera (2M, no optical zoom).

I wanted a 4M/5M ultra compact camera and had my eye set on newer Canon SD camera. However, I don't want to pay too much for the camera so I ended up looking for non Canon SD cameras.

One of the consideration I have is that I don't want a camera with proprietary memory (so Sony is out) or semi-proprietary memory (I considered xD a proprietary after reading that the panorama mode for some Olympus camera only works with Olympus's own xD card).

Finally, I settled on Minolta X60 after some research. I am quite happy with the camera it is very small, the 2.5" LCD is quite big (no viewfinder though), the control is quite logical, and the picture quality is pretty good. The battery life of about 150 pictures is not quite enough for a long trip but you can pick up non-OEM batteries for a few dollars.

The 15MB internal memory is not accessible when an external memory card is plug in. However, it may come handy when you forget your SD card.

Read Best Reviews of Konica Minolta X60 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom Here

I only paid $230 from Amazon directly and know that it was the best deal ever. I love it. The zoom quality is great, large screen, fast start-up time, immediate shutter release, and time between photos is awesome. I like this camera better then the new $600 Kodak. This camera looks great and perfomrs great also.

Want Konica Minolta X60 5MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom Discount?

I had the Minolta Xg and the Minolta g400 before this camera. The x60 has a great design. Very easy to use and stylish. I really like the internal optical zoom. The size, weight, battery life, and scene modes are all pluses.

Cons: low light comes out eithe over exposed with the flash, or blurry. Hard to get good shots indoors. Screen quality is average and does not show the pictures very well.

Overall: great, stylish, compact camera with some limitations

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Rain Cover For PANASONIC AG-DVC80H AG-DVX100 AG-DVX100P AG-HMC150 AG-HMC40 AG-HPX171 AG-HVX200 AG-D

Rain Cover For PANASONIC AG-DVC80H AG-DVX100 AG-DVX100P AG-HMC150 AG-HMC40 AG-HPX171 AG-HVX200 AG-DVX100P AG-HVX200 CANON XH-G1 XH-H1+ MagicFiber Microfiber Lens Cleaning Cloth"Very trustworthy seller and product. Great price for great quality." This cover is not one that will decay over years of shooting, and for the price it is a great deal all around.

Save 43% Off

Thursday, January 9, 2014

Evertech Cctv Infrared Security Camera - 30 Ir Led(82ft Night Vision) Cctv Camera, 1/3 Inch Sony Su

Evertech Cctv Infrared Security Camera - 30 Ir Led(82ft Night Vision) Cctv Camera, 1/3 Inch Sony Super HAD Ccd, 700 Tv Line High Resolution 3.6mm Lens, Indoor/outdoor Bullet Surveillance Camera.3.6mm (slightly 'fisheye') lens an improvement in field of view over original 6mm. I would never buy 6mm lens (they come with orig. systems). Day and night vision a little better in clarity and color than original 400tvl cmos. IRs light up well at least 40 to 50 feet. 2x big as original 400tvl cmos with sturdier mount. If this is using Sony Super HAD chip it's not doing it near as well as full Sony, but then it was only $56. Good enough to keep until I get a full Sony and move this one to the back.

Was on time with UPS.

VERY IMPORTANT NOTE!!!

Getting a better camera(s) is useless if you cannot record at the 30 fps(images per second) AT THE FULL D1 SETTING on the DVR or NVR. 1 fps at D1 uses up a lot more than 1 fps C1 (HD1 is 'half D1' quality, it's not linear comparison). The image resolution is degraded at less than that, but it is crucial to good facial recognition. This is a big problem with most DVRs that have more than 4 cameras input (some will not do 30 fps D1 on all 4 even then !). If it claims at least 120 fps D1 total for a 4 channel DVR/NVR then you can be fairly sure it can allow up to 30 fps per camera D1.

Do the research on the DVR FIRST!!

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

Canon FS21 Dual Flash Memory Camcorder w/16GB Internal Memory & 48x Advanced Zoom - 2009 MODEL

Canon FS21 Dual Flash Memory Camcorder w/16GB Internal Memory & 48x Advanced Zoom - 2009 MODELFirst off, let's be clear, this is a standard definition camera. Even thought Cannon's high-definition camcorders (HF) series are within about $100 of the price of this camera, I decided to stay with standard definition (for now) for the following reasons:

1. I wanted ease of transfer and an easy ability to edit and burn DVD's of my videos without having to upgrade my whole set up to handle the HD recording format.

2. Video editing times for HD video are ridiculously, painflully long. I have a quad core with 8 GB of ram and the time to compile a video project was crazy. I simply think the HD video has outpaced current home computing power. Maybe in another couple years computers will catch up.

3. Most of the software that I've tried that have the capability of editing and burning hi-def video are very unstable. Again, I just think that the home editing technology hasn't caught up withthe video technology yet. there seems to be a lot of compatibility issues with the MPEG4-AVC / H.264 high definition media format.

So I decided to stick with a standard definition camera (for now). I chose this camera because:

1. Dual flash drive memory format. I'm so sick of dealing with direct to DVD or DV video cameras, and all of the issues of transfering and converting that information to the computer. I wanted something that got recorded directly to solid state...no more read errors or disc errors. This fits the bill wonderfully! Video gets recorded directly to camera's internal memory, plug it into the computer and it downloads quickly and painlessly to and MPEG format. No more dealing with .VOB DVD files! Two thumbs up here.

2. Cannon optical zoom. Very good zoom. Maintains quality throughout the zoom range. Prior to this camera, the most zoom I ever had in a cam corder was 10 time optical. Having this much zoom is a big bonus.

3. Built in light and mike jack. Although the built in video light isn't tremendously powerful, it is better than no light at all. And I love the external mike jack. I can record performaces of friends bands with an audio line out directly from the PA console. Makes for super sound quality in otherwise difficult audio conditions. Most cameras at this price point don't have either option.

4. Cannon name. I've always gone back and forth between Cannon, Nikon, and Panasonic for camera/video products. Althought this is a generalization, Cannon always seems to have the most accurate colors. Especially in the blues...Cannon seems to have the "bluest" blues and the competitors always seem to have a purplish tint to their blues.

My experience has been good. I confess I have been a bit disappointed with the video quality, but i have to keep reminding myself this is a standard definition camera. It looks as good if not slightly better than my past video cameras. I was hoping the video quality would be significantly better, but perhaps that was just an unrealistic expectation on my part.

I've had no problems with the included softare. Everything installed easy as pie and began downloading test videos without any error. The resulting files downloaded to the computer are MPeg files, which are able to be played by a host of media players (Windows Media Player, Real Player, VLC Media player, etc.) as well as the bundled software. I e-mailed some files to family and they were able to open in WMP by double clicking on the attachment. I'm so happy with the ease of downloading, sharing, and editing files that I wish I bought a camera like this years ago.

I will say that the included video editing software is OK, but if you want to do anything other than the most basic trimming and joining of clips for burning to a DVD, you will need third party software. I could get by with what's included, by as I've gotten better and more practice at creating and editing home movies, I'm enjoying a lot of the flashy feature of my third party video editing software. But for basic DVD creation, the software is adequate.

Finally, the camera is very compact and lightweight. No more big camera bags to lug around. I can fit this in my jacket pocket. Overall very happy with this camrea. I was looking for something that was much more user friendly than my past error-riddled cameras, and I found it.

I've been very disappointed with my Canon FS21. The drivers are still not up on their web site and I have not been able to find any articles. Specifically, it has just been a huge chore to download the video files (pictures work just fine) to my Vista machine. I do some IT work, so I set up an XP machine and thought I'd be done with it, but it is still a hassle.

Working with the software is most of my problem. There are several editing programs (video and audio) that came with the camcorder. That means I keep having to try the various programs when I tweak something to try to get it to work. I really with there was one program and then more importantly some help on the Canon (or the software vendor's) web site.

The picture for the videos is not as good as I expected either. I knew that its weakness was in low light from other reviews, but it is pretty unusable if it is even kind of dark (there is a little light, but it isn't enough to overcome the weaknesses). Also, it is just kind of pixelated in its highest def. I bought a Canon FS21 in December for $300 less that is just a better camcorder.

Amazon was great, I needed it right away and paid for the improved shipping and it came when it was supposed to.

My final complaint is that I went to the Canon web site and made a review just like this one (back then I gave it 2 stars overall) and they took it down. I promise I didn't swear or anything! That disappointed me a lot because I had used their site to choose it and I guess now I know why I ended up bummed about my purchase and their support of it.

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Bought this Canon FS21 over a year ago to make videos from my deer blind. Bought it because of the Consumer Reports ratings (#1). Read reviews on web and most stated difficulties transfering videos to home computers. I should have paid attention to the reviews on editing videos and transfering to home computer. To this day, have not been able to achieve either. The software that comes with the camera is a total piece of @@@@@. Again, I should have paid more attention to the reviews. Totaly dissatisfied with this camera and feel really stupid for buying it.

Read Best Reviews of Canon FS21 Dual Flash Memory Camcorder w/16GB Internal Memory & 48x Advanced Zoom - 2009 MODEL Here

I got this camera in an emergency for my disney family vacation. Not sure until i recieved this puppy. Once I saw it out of the box. I was impressed with size and ease of use. video quality is good. but photo quality is not that great unless u have a very good light. all in acceptable. I did not do a big research yet with software and all.But copied all the vidoes to my sdhc card and downloaded to usb drive and uploaded to youtube with no problem.

I hope this helps

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I have used the Canon FS21 to record several soccer matches and a family gathering since I purchased it several weeks ago. I have not been disappointed with any aspect of this camera. The manual was quickly read, and if I were to be honest with myself I would have to admit that there are features on this camera that I have not yet used or understand. However, that has not prevented me from creating several very satisfactory DVDs of high school soccer tournaments.

Monday, December 2, 2013

Triplett 8055 CamView W35v CCTV Wrist Mounted Test Monitor with 3.5" LCD and 12 Volt Output

Triplett 8055 CamView W35v CCTV Wrist Mounted Test Monitor with 3.5' LCD and 12 Volt Output
  • High contrast 3.5" daylight viewable display
  • Video (Via BNC connectors) loop thru capabilities
  • On screen display of video settings
  • Power CCTV security with 12 volt output
  • One year limited warranty

Due to the fact that this has a power supply output to power the camera, it allows you to test various camera locations with nothing more than the monitor, a camera and a ladder. Save hours of time running cables to a location only to find that you can't get the camera angle you are looking for from that spot. In addition, once your camera is installed, you can use it to fine tune the viewing angle right from the camera as opposed to be on cell phone with someone else in front of the viewing monitor. Only con, battery life is not long. If you plan to hang more than 5 or 6 cameras in a day, use the battery wisely or plan to charge it in between use.

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The only problem I have with this device is that when you are testing a camera and the IR comes on it drains the battery at a very fast rate. If it were possible to add extra battery capacity that would go a long way. How I am dealing with this problem, is that I am using and external belt clip battery pack to supply the voltage to the camera as opposed to using your device to supply the voltage. Other than this I am pleased with the product.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30K 8MP Digital Camera with 12x Image Stabilized Optical Zoom (Black)

Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30K 8MP Digital Camera with 12x Image Stabilized Optical ZoomThe Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30 is the replacement for Panasonic's well-liked DMC-FZ20 which came out in late 2004. The FZ30 improves on that camera in almost every way, especially in build quality and ergonomics.

I'll mention the downside first. Despite an increase in resolution from 5 to 8 megapixels, the image quality has not improved all that much. Panasonic's new 8 megapixel chip is quite noisy (which equates to "grainy" in film cameras) and overall the images won't look much better at a given print size than the old, 5 megapixel camera. This is not to say the pictures are unacceptable they are good, in fact, except for pictures taken in low light but rather that if you have a 5 megapixel camera, you shouldn't rush to buy an 8 megapixel and expect great improvements. The detail in the shots, however, is very good.

With that out of the way, almost everything else about the camera has improved to a quite incredible degree. It really does feel like Panasonic listened to their customer response and fixed most everything they didn't like.

The camera is a little larger than the FZ20, making it quite hefty bigger than some SLR cameras, in fact, although a SLR with a comparable lens would be much larger. It's also not light, at about one and a half pounds. This does mean that it's easy to steady and hold, but it's far from a pocket camera.

The lens is totally new, and unlike that in the FZ20, does not retract or move during focussing or zooming all the movement is internal. This means that the unit is a lot more sealed and solid-feeling, and contributes to making start-up times commendably fast. Unlike the previous model, zooming is done with a ring around the lens like a traditional camera, rather than by a motor and rocker switch. This takes a little getting used to if you've been using most other digital cameras, but soon becomes second nature and much quicker than the motor. In manual focus mode, the lens can be focussed with another lens-mounted ring. The display shows a zoomed-in area to aid manual focussing, and I found this feature quite usable.

The zoom range is 35-420mm (35mm camera equivalent), which is pretty much identical to the previous camera and gives a 12x range. This gives as much telephoto reach as is practicable to hand-hold and get a sharp picture, even with image stabilization. Should you desire more, Panasonic sells an add-on lens giving even more reach, but I'd advise a tripod. You're more likely to desire more wide-angle, in my opinion, and another conversion lens is available for that.

Unlike the previous camera, the lens does not have a constant F2.8 aperture, but rather gives F2.8 at the wide end and F3.7 at the long end. This is still very good; clearly, some compromise had to be made.

Overall, the construction feels much more solid and high-quality than the FZ20. The hand-grip is also improved, being much deeper and easier to hold, and the location of the shutter button is improved. The FZ20 always felt a little fragile, and this camera does not.

The LCD screen is much improved, and now is a flip-down and twist model, meaning it can be folded inward to protect it, or folded down to view from above or (with a twist) below. This is a very useful feature, making it easy to shoot over crowds or get a more natural view of small children, pets etc. I think the sideways-flipping style is slightly easier to use than this downward one, but this is still very good, and a solid upgrade.

Menus and operation seem little changed from the FZ20, and are good. The flash seems better than most, and doesn't wash things out with close subjects either.

While I don't use movie modes hardly at all, I believe from reading the manual that the movie mode on this one is much improved from the FZ20, and can produce full-speed VGA quality movies of shortish duration. For more than short clips of your kids, I'd recommend a movie camera instead.

In conclusion, this is a high quality camera that right now is the king of the mega-zoom, fixed lens camera market. The pictures are as good or better than the others in the market, and in ergonomics, usability and 'real camera' solidness, the FZ30 is right now unbeatable. It works and feels like a very high-quality piece of equipment, and I don't think you can get a better "all-in-one" camera for any money at this moment.

One must understand, though, that compromises are made to get that huge 12x zoom range in a camera. If you don't need all that telephoto, you could buy an entry-level dSLR for very little more money; although the kit lens it comes with will be much the inferior of the FZ30's Leica mega-zoom, the dSLR's imaging chip will produce higher-quality images, especially in low light.

If you have the FZ20, is it worth the upgrade? Not if you want to upgrade for image quality; yes, if you want a much more solidly built, ergonomically satisfying camera. Is that worth the money? In the end, it's up to you, but I'd advise going to a store and handling one; you may fall in love with it, it's that good.

I'm a pro, working for a large city daily newspaper for 22 years, and shooting professionaly for 25 years (and counting, with enthusiasm for the job). My previous cameras: Sears 500MX (my first SLR), Nikon EM, F2A, FM2, F3, F4, F5 ( all film)... And then the Kodak DCS, Nikon D1, D1H, D2H, Lumix FZ20 (all digital). I've shot events such as Superbowl XXXV (D1H), 2004 Olympics, 2005 Indonesian tsunami (D2H), and Hurricane Katrina (D2H, Lumix FZ20).

But I was issued an FZ30 by request, after using an FZ20 so I could finally zoom while shooting video (for web content). You know why I also like the FZ30? You can shoot Tiger Woods' back swing without him throwing a club at you, which he'd be right to do if you sat on a motor as he started his swing.

The FZ30 is much heavier than many of the average cameras on sale. It looks pro and feels heavy enough. The shutter speed range is even greater than the FZ20, capturing pictures at 1/2000th sec to a full 60 seconds (the D2H has only 30 seconds exposure maximum. Other pro shooters have noticed my camera, and ask plenty of questions. It does just about everything, including an option to create animated films with this camera. But it's not the ultimate dream camera because it isn't perfect.

I totally shame the digital noise on this unit; enough decent cameras in the same price range don't experience the higher levels of noise, even for ISO 100. But I work for a newspaper.... and there is some decent noise-reduction software to control it that doesn't compromise flirting with over-manipulation ethics questions. I can now shoot some concerts and can shoot golf differently b/c I turned off the shutter and beep noises the camera makes.

I wish the camera had a wider wide angle. The zoom and focus controls seem too close. And the rear thumb dial seemed a tiny bit out of position at times. It's quiet as a mouse. People don't even know you're shooting video, which makes people unaware of you, an important thing to have for candid news-gathering. I love the FZ30 as a 3rd camera in my arsenal. I just completed a stint, shooting the crew of Pride of Baltimore II, a tall ship. It worked wonders, save for some errant focusing every now and then.

I pack my Lumix and my Powerbook along with my passport when I go on vacation; in a pinch, I can travel worldwide and shoot virtually any assignment, including spot news, with the zoom range that the FZ30 has. That was the selling point for me. Any camera that has a decent image quality with a 12:1 zoom ratio and a lens that gathers more light is worth considering. And I love the true colors it can yield for white balance, one thing that my D2H bodies can sometimes find difficult to achieve.

This camera is better suited for daylight (sorry for anyone Alaska in the winter!), but you can get amazing shots if you respect a camera's limits. The better the light, the better the image. That goes for any photography. I can shoot 99 percent of my assignments with this camera.

Watch out when you have the LCD screen flipped out; once it breaks off from a hit, I would think you might have to consider replacement. Purchase a really big memory card, which are cheaper. A faster one (SD rated card) for those who want to shoot video, which you can opt between low definition and VGA, which is a good size image (it only shoots in standard TV size. You don't have any option to capture video in any other format, as you can with film.

You can also crop your images or even downsize them for web emails in the camera. The FZ30 feels solid enough. And I did drop my lens shade from 50 feet (it was mounted, but the mount is not very secure) and it bounced but didn't crack.

Make certain to also purchase at least one extra battery, because if your power drains, you either pop in a fresh one, or stop shooting and wait over an hour for your battery to recharge. The batteries from my FZ20 can fit and run the FZ30, but the reverse can't be done.

Please, read the manual. This camera was well-designed, and Panasonic seems to really work on their cameras based on feedback. You have menus in several different camera modes, besides the basic setup menu options. One thing very interesting is that you can set the camera to extend its optical zoom to 19.1, much greater than 12X (the camera actually begins to crop into the frame when you zoom past the full frame 12X maximum zoom, which is good if you want to save a step in image processing.

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Greetings from Sinister Minister friends! Today I want to talk to you about yet another amazing digital device that comes to us from Panasonic of all people!!I mean after all when you think of digital cameras you think Nikon, Canon, Olympus, Sony ect. ect. But Panasonic!? C'mon now they make everything from blenders to stereo systems! But, If your a photographer thats just not cool. Well guys we had better get a whole new set of standards because Panasonic has beat the crap out of two of the Largest camera companies out there in the 12X mega zoom catagory! And not just by a little either, by a very wide margin.

Now to be fair Panasonic "Lumix" cameras have always been well respected cameras for thier performance, pictures, lenses etc. but then again if a guy shows up to shoot your daughters wedding with a Panasonic camera up until now you would have kicked him out! The FZ-30K at first glance looks like many of its counterparts, with few exceptions. Its size is very close to that of the Nikon 8800, and I'm not sure but I think they weigh about the same. I have my camera here in front of me so lets take a walk around. On the back you have a normal selection of controls, a EVF with a diopter, EVF/LCD control, AE Lock, Display, Menu, And delete buttons, as well as a circular Navagation switch for other controls like exposure adjustment, flash control, etc. The odd thing here is the LCD screen which gives you a fantastic image (as does the EVF) has movement that seems somewhat awkward and a bit restricted, but the EVF on the camera rivals the one on my E-300 SLR so hey who cares!? Around the side we have the SD memory card door that is solid and has a slide lock, Downside here is that the FZ-30 will work with cards up to the max available, (now in SD 2GB), but when they go to 3 or 4 GB (and you know they will) FZ-30 users will be shut out! That's why as a rule for high performance cameras like the FZ-30 I rather see CF Type 1 CF or Type 2 Micro-drives, But hey just making a note. Jumping to the other side we find one of the features I love about this camera, that is a 3 position switch that lets you shift between focus modes on the fly! Outstanding!! For those of you who take your shots on the go you know how infuriating it is to have to navagate thru a menu to chnge the focus options. The FZ-30 gives you three optionsAF, AF Macro, and manual, it also has a neat little gimmick of when you are using the manual focus mode the camera enlarges the center portion of your shot, and using the fine focus ring on the lens you can fine tune your shot with zero guess work! WOW! That alone blew me away, I hate it when you take a shot thinking its in focus but... The FZ-30 has all but eliminated this problem! Another thing I love about this camera is the flash does not engage until YOU open it YESSS! I hate auto pop up flashes!

Getting to the lens we come to possibly the coolest feature on the whole camera wich is the lens itself. Besides being a Leica lens, its the fact that it zooms, pulls back, etc. etc. all within the lens housing itself! Translation? No matter how much you zoom with the FZ-30 the camera never changes size! No whirring motors or gears, nothing but zoom! The operation of the lens is simple you have 2 focus rings the larger for general zooming and focus, a smaller one for fine focus in manual mode, and a fine focus option buy pressing lightly on the shutter button. The lens is super quiet and smooth in operation, has very minor barrel distortion a wide angle, and produces images with sharp and focused corners. The other main feature here however is the zoom capability of the FZ-30, yes it has a 12X optical zoom but it does not stop there. This camera will let you adjust the aspect ratio of your images and thereby increasing zoom capability! I can't explain exactly how this works (I failed trig in school) but I can give you examples.

At 8MP the ratio is 4:3 a standard photo, in the menu you can change that to 16:9 (widescreen) and your resolution lowers to 5.5MP Hello!! thats called true panoramic photography right within the camera with out needeing software to "Stitch" your shots together! I think I just heard Olympus and Nikon Squeal!! Keep the same 4:3 Ratio but turn down the image resolution to an even 5MP and your zoom capability jumps to 15.3X turn it down to 3MP and it jumps to 19.1X !!! That is still good enough for 8X10s!! Thats before you even get into add on lenses!! The pop up flash is housed right over the lens and can be adjusted within the camera as far as brightness etc., also here you will find a hot shoe the standard mode wheel as well as buttons to select your drive mode and stabilizer mode. Since I work part time at BestBuy selling cameras I have had the chance to compare the stabilization on the Sony H1, Canon S2IS, and the Kodak 850 I have found the one on the FZ-30 to be the best and most consistant, The FZ-30 also offers you 2 options with the stabilizer, Constant and shutter release the latter operates when you press the shutter button only and is the setting I have found to be the best! The FZ-30 has 14 scene modes, and has two places on the mode dial where you can preset your 2 favorites.The "Baby" setting on the camera has been taking a beating by critics as being silly, but since I just had a son recently I found it rather cool! All you do is enter your childs birthday when in the mode, and everytime you take a picture of him/her in the mode the camera shows thier exact age! In addition to some minor image enhancements.

Now the main reason we all buy cameras as I have said before is for pictures. Does the FZ-30 take good pictures? No. It takes amazing pictures (See the examples I have posted) Even with the zoom maxed out I can get clear sharp pictures, partly because that stabilizer is so effective. In all of the tests I have had time to put it thru the camera has performed amazingly well. at higher ISO settings noise on this camera can get to be a problem but only if you crop your pictures out at 200 to 300% and besides there are tons of good noise removal programs out now to solve this. Noise at higher ISO settings is a side effect of digital photography in general not generally one specific camera. Some are worse than others but none are great so either fix it or forget it. If you have a good enough printer you won't notice that much anyway.

Well this is getting kind of long winded so let me wrap this up. There are tons of features the FZ-30 has that I can't possibly go thru here so let me give you the BestBuy straight & narrow! I own the Sony DSC-H1 and while it is a great camera it is no comparison to the FZ-30. Why? the FZ-30 is faster, has higher resolution, more image configurations and zoom capabilities, A Hot Shoe, Better lens quality, Possibly one of the finest cameras in reproduction of color that I have ever seen! Sharp focused images (even at extended zoom settings). The Canon s2Is?? It is not even in the same league so I won't even mention it. (In fact I found it to be the worst of all I tested.) Bottom line is the FZ-30 is possibly the finest high end, fixed lens (Prosumer) camera to come out in the last 3 years (Since the F-828) NormallyI tell people to shop around but in this case DON'T! This is definitely the best of the new mega-zoom cameras and is probably one of the top three prosumer cameras available today. I sold my Nikon 8700 to buy this camera and I have more or less decided to give the ax to a few more! This beast made alot of cameras in my stable obsolete! So to Panasonic I say Welcome to the Big Time, and to you I say STOP!! look no further and buy this camera, this is a work of art in photographic technology! This my friends is one hell of a damn camera!

Oh yes the downside...it is very hard to find accessories for this camera!! next to impossible!! so Panasonic shold get on the ball!! After all your a for real camera company now! Maybe they always were, Hmmmmm.

Thanks for reading and happy shooting!

Read Best Reviews of Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ30K 8MP Digital Camera with 12x Image Stabilized Optical Zoom (Black) Here

I've had my FZ-30 for about 2 months now and thought it was time to enter my comments.

The one negative thing you will no doubt read about the FZ-30, if you are searching out professional reviews, are comments about the "noise" or graininess. Yes this camera can exhibit noise under certain circumstances, as do most if not all bridge cameras. I would compare the noise with 400 ASA film or even 1000 ASA film. If you are very picky about your photos and are looking for the highest quality you may not be happy with this camera when you have it set to 400 ASA and take photos in low light. You may be able to find another bridge camera with a bit less noise but if you are that fussy you may have to purchase a DSLR and deal with extra expense and changing lenses. If you are like me, and can stand a little grain in a small number of your photos you will be quite happy with this camera. If you do want to reduce the noise there are a couple of software utilities (noiseninja) that can help.

In my case I was upgrading from a 5 year old 3.3 megapixel digital camera that had served me well but did have some shortcomings. The Panasonic FZ-30 has to be one of the best values in photography today. The quality of the Leica lens, along with the rest of the great features, for the current Amazon price of $544 is an outstanding value. The most amazing thing to me is the range of possibilities this camera offers.

My wife can pick this camera up, set it to Auto mode, and snap some photos of the kids easily. Two minutes later I can take it out in the back yard and capture the awsome blue bird sitting on the branch at 12X zoom, and the next shot can be of a ladybug on a flower in macro mode. All of this is done with the same lens and the simple spin of the zoom ring. The range of possibilities available with this camera are beyond my current expierence level. And the resulting photos are awsome.

I had some particular features in mind when I did an extensive search for a new digital camera; most based on the shortcomings of my older camera. I wanted a longer zoom range, hot shoe for an external flash, and the ability to focus in dark or low light situations. As I did my search I came across other features that were now available in the range of modern digital cameras and added them to my list. A swivel LCD is a handy feature, as is the manual focus ring, 640x480 30fps video mode with sound, high resolution LCD and EVF, very fast shutter response time, fast focus, and higher resolution. The FZ-30 has it all.

One of the great things about a higher resolution camera is the ability to crop the photos on the computer and still have enough resolution so the final image doesn't lose its quality. Eight megapixels, along with the 12X zoom, gives me the ability to catch the grandchildren in action, then zoom in for a quality printout later.

Don't be tempted to purchase the Sony DSC-H1 or Canon S2 IS just to save $50-$150, the Panasonic is a LOT more camera. If size is a big concern the FZ-30 is certainly larger than the Sony or Canon, but it is quite comfortable in the hand and not as heavy as I thought it was going to be.

Pros

o 12X analog zoom with macro

o manual pop up flash with long range, hot shoe for external

o manual zoom ring and focus ring

o high resolution swivel 2" LCD

o Leica lens

o 640x480 video

o great user interface

o fast focus and very fast shutter release

o much, much, more...

Cons

o noise under certain conditions

o propriatery battery which works quite well but I prefer AA standard batteries

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My Panasonic FZ30 arrived this past Saturday (12/17/05) and I have a 2 week grace period in which I'm allowed to return the camera if dissatisfied to the store where it was purchased. I have read many reviews. The underlining theme of the reviews is that the FZ30 is a great camera for the money but it has too much NOISE. I got together which a friend of mine who owns a Nikon D50 to take several photos and compare them. All photos were taken in auto mode at the same subject, at the same distance and position, and in the same lighting. The D50 sizing was set to 6.1 mp and the FZ30 at 7mp and we used the highest quality setting other than TIFF and RAW that the camera allowed. And except for one photo, all pictures were taken without the flash. My intent was to take pictures under conditions that were not ideal and most likely to bring out noise. Most pictures were printed on 4 x 6 glossy photo paper and some on standard computer paper at the 8 x10 size. From my perspective, I think the FZ30 performed well in comparison. The sharpness in the pictures was about the same, the detail was slightly better in the D50, and the FZ30 had a clear edge in the color. I took the photos to work and showed them to another friend of mine who is a photo enthusiast. I showed them without my friend knowing what picture was taken by what camera. He only knew that the cameras involved were the D50 and the FZ30. He chose some D50 pictures over the FZ30 and likewise with the FZ30 over the D50. It was about even in number. Essentially, he agreed with my summary and perspective. I'll elaborate more on 4 of the photos.

Photo 1: The picture was taken inside in a sun-room (of sorts) with many windows utilizing natural lighting. The picture was taken at around 2:30 in the afternoon. The sky was totally covered with snow clouds no blue and no sun anywhere. At 5pm, it is pitch black outside. The setting was borderline flash needed. In fact, when taking the picture from the D50, the flash did pop up and become engaged. My friend then turned off the flash and re-took the picture again. Our photos taken in auto mode were printed on computer paper at the 8 x 10 size. Note: the readout on the FZ30 photo said the ISO was 200. My friend thought the D50's photo was better and I agreed just to be nice. In reality, I thought might was just a hair better. We both agreed that they were very comparable. By the way, my friend at work thought the FZ30 produced the better photo. All three of us detected no noise in the FZ30 photo.

Photo 2: The picture was taken (auto mode) inside utilizing artificial light. The photos were printed on glossy 4 x 6 photo paper. Note: the readout on the FZ30 photo reflected an ISO setting of 200. The D50 photo was a clear winner here. The FZ30 definitely had noise. We ran the FZ30 through a noise reduction software tool and reprinted the photo. The D50 still won but not my much. The noise reducer did a great job with no noticeable loss in detail.

Photo 3: Again (as always) in auto mode and no flash and same setting as #2, we took a picture of a very colorful tapestry my friend purchased during a trip to Mexico. Again the readout on the FZ30 photo was ISO 200. The picture was printed on 4 x 6 glossy photo paper. The D50 won in one aspect but lost in another. In the D50, you could clearly see the "minute" horizontal and vertical weave lines. In the FZ30, the horizontal weave line was fairly strong but the vertical line was faded and almost not present. However, the FZ30 was a clear winner with the color. It was much more true to form than the D50 and my friend agreed.

Photo 4: This was the only flash picture taken. The readout on the FZ30 reflected an ISO setting of 100. The picture was printed on 4 x 6 glossy photo paper. Except for color, it was dead even for sharpness and detail but again the FZ30 had better color.

In conclusion, I plan on keeping this camera. Other reviewers have pointed out the many features this camera has so I won't comment other than to say I "strongly" agree. Plus, it is extremely user friendly. Most (probably in the 95+ %) of my pictures will "not" be taken in low light non-flash situations. And those taken in low light will probably wind up on 4 x 6's after going through a noise reducer. If you take a lot of low light pictures for bigger than 4 x 6's than you might want to consider a different camera.

Friday, September 20, 2013

Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS Digital SLR Camera with EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM Lens

Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS Digital SLR Camera with EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM LensI didn't rush to make a review of this camera, as I wanted to really put it through it's paces first. I won't try to list every feature or go over every bullet point (the above description does a fine job), but instead try to go over a few things which make a big difference to me as a 5D Mark II owner. For some background, I bought an original 5D in 2007, a 5DII in 2008 and have been working with these bodies ever since then. I also have experience with all of the Canon 1-series up through the 1DIII and 1DsIII. I currently log about 60,000 photos per year with the 5D Mark IIs as a professional wedding and portrait photographer. I shoot almost exclusively with fast L prime lenses in my work.

So after a week of solid shooting with the camera, here are the areas which are of note relative to previous 5D bodies:

**AUTOFOCUS**

AF is the elephant in the room here so I'll address it first. Good news, we now have a focusing system worth of it's price point. The AF system here is identical to that in the 1Dx and is THE most sophisticated AF system EVER put in any Canon body. It is superior to that in the 1DV and all bodies before it.

I have tested the AF point in servo and one shot mode with my fastest lenses. Speed, accuracy, and consistency have been exceptional and better than anything I have used before. AF gets the job done with zero drama. NO focus jitter, NO frontfocus, NO backfocus, nothing but near-instant, dead accurate focusing with all of my lenses. Even with my Sigma 85/1.4 (which gives my 5DII bodies absolute fits) is 100% accurate with no jitter on the 5DIII. Center AF point and all peripheral AF points are all usable with fast primes. With the 5DII you just use the center AF point and hope for the best (with often mixed results). You could forget using the outer AF points with fast lenses on previous 5D bodies. That has all changed now.

Just to see how far I could push it, I took my most difficult to focus lens (24/1.4 II), put it on the 5DIII, and tried to focus on my black lab in my dimly lit apartment. At a distance of about 2 feet I would able to lock focus on the dog's eye with the far left AF point at F1.4, 1/40, ISO4000. Think about that. I was able to focus on a black eye on a black dog in a dimly lit apartment at F1.4. The 5DII would have hunted all day long trying to do this, even with it's center AF point.

I could sit here and write a book on how happy this performance makes me. For what I do, if this were the only upgrade from the 5D Mark II, it alone would be worth of the $3500 price tag. That said, there is more...

**BUILD QUALITY**

It's hard to put my finger on exactly what changed, but the 5DIII just feels more substantial. It feels like a chopped down 1-series instead of a buffed up 10 series. The contour of the body has changed to fit your hand better. The rubber is also a new compound which is much grippier than before. The 5DIII feels much better to hold and use than the previous 5D bodies.

**SCREEN**

I wasn't expecting a big improvement here, but the screen is drop dead gorgeous. The height is about the same, but it's wider than that in the 5DII and fits the aspect of horizontal images perfectly now. The screen itself has better coatings which allow you to see it easier outside. The contrast, viewing angle, color, and saturation have all improved noticeably. It has a very similar look to a high end smartphone screen. This is a substantial upgrade from the 5DII's screen.

**IMAGE QUALITY**

Image quality is better than the 5DII, but not substantially so. Let me explain.

The 5DIII now natively amplifies the sensor data to ISO 25,600 whereas the 5DII only natively went to ISO 6400. This means that for anything higher than ISO 6400, the 5DIII is better. In RAW you are looking at an improvement of about 1/2 to 3/4 of a stop at high ISO. At lower ISOs, the noise level is about the same.

JPEG quality has improved much more though. The JPEG engine in this camera is staggeringly good and a solid 2 stops better at controlling noise at high ISO than the 5DII. It strikes the best balance of detail and noise control of any camera on the market right now. Note though that default NR in JPEG mode is fairly strong and that you will generally attain a better "look" from your files with the "low" NR setting.

As an aside, the nasty cross-hatch banding present in the deep shadows of 5DII files is now gone with the Mark III. There is still mild vertical banding, but it's similar to the original 5D and only visible when pushed heavily (3 or more stops).

**METERING**

I don't have any hard data on this, but I'm fully convinced the metering of the 5DIII is better than that of the 5DII. I find myself correcting with exposure compensation MUCH less now with the new body than with the mark II. Shooting with the two side the newfound metering accuracy of the mark III is very obvious. I found the 5DII metering very similar to the original 5D. The new 5DIII is much improved here.

**SPEED AND STORAGE**

Camera startup and operation is near-instant. Shutter lag and mirror blackout is now faster than before and leads to a more instant, responsive feel while shooting. This, combined with the vastly improved AF make for a radically different experience from previous 5D bodies.

Dual memory card slots mean you can now either backup your data to a 2nd slot *OR* you can "span" cards. Spanning means that once one card is full it will automatically swtich to the second card. SUCH a nice feature. I can't tell you how many times my card has filled up at the most inopportune moments and shooting stopped. No more.

Shooting speed is either 3fps or 6fps and the buffer is about 18 frames deep in RAW only with a fast CF card. You can shoot almost indefinitely in JPEG mode without hitting the buffer. For RAW I would recommend a 60MB/s CF card to take full advantage of the CF slot speed. The SD slot is slower, but still capable of about 30MB/s write speed.

**COLOR**

The 5D Mark II had a slight magenta color cast. This was easily correctable in post processing and wasn't a huge deal most of the time. I now report that color cast is gone and that the 5DIII's color is much more neutral. Skin tones in general look better due to the more neutral tone.

Additionally I have found auto white balance to be improved over previous 5D models. I've noticed that while post processing I'm having to correct color less with the 5DIII files than the 5DII files. This is very exciting, as it will save me a fair amount of time in post processing. Per usual, all of the cameras struggle under tungsten lighting. However, AWB is able to get color surprisingly close with anything that contains natural lighting.

**MENUS**

I would strongly advise reading the manual because there are a lot of new settings and options which won't be familar to 5DII users. There are also a LOT of different ways to set up your AF system, so a little experimentation is needed. In general, the menu system is more complicated that before, but this also allows a much greater degree of customization of the camera. In that regard, the 5DIII is much closer to a 1-series than before. Take the time to learn it and set it up correctly.

**MISC**

You now have the option to one-click zoom to 100% at your AF point. This means you can instantly check focusing with one button push. This saves a lot of time and frustration while shooting. There is also a "silent" shutter mode which only makes about 1/2 the noise as the standard shutter. You can do one-shot or 3FPS in silent shutter mode. 6FPS continuous is only available with the standard shutter mode.

Another brand new feature that's exciting is the ability to re-map buttons on the camera to perform other functions. The options are very extensive. One in particular I'm excited about is the ability to toggle one-shot with AI-Servo by clicking the DOF preview button (which is now on the right hand side of the camera, in perfect reach of your middle or ring finger). If you are shooting a still subject in one-shot and they start to move, simply push the DOF preview button and you're instantly in AI Servo mode. There is no need to move your hand, or even look away from the viewfinder. When you are done, simply release the button and you're back in one-shot mode.

**CONCLUSION**

Canon finally woke up with the 5D Mark III. The completeness of this refresh is hard to overstate, as there is no part of this camera that was left untouched from the Mark II. The overall experience of using the camera has been transformed to an entirely different level. You will be faster, better, and more efficient with a 5D Mark III relative to its predecessors.

The improvements here will most cater to those who shoot in demanding environments which require high ISO and fast, accurate autofocus. Canon basically fixed most every complaint anyone ever had with the 5DII while maintaining the things which made the 5DII great (resolution, image quality, small body).

The price of this body is probably about $500 too high compared to its primary competition the $3000 Nikon D800, which is likely to annoy some people. Though individually they cater to different types of photographers and have different strengths over the other, overall these two cameras are comparable products. If you are starting from scratch or have minimal gear investment, the D800 is worth a hard look at. If you are heavily invested in one system or another, you would probably do best just to stick with your current brand. Both are fine cameras and you can't go wrong with either one.

I was able to pre-order and the Canon 5D Mark III arrived on March 29th. I had mixed feelings when the press release first came out with the specs on the new Mark III. Several features that were high on my wish list didn't make it into the camera, but when I started seeing some of the image samples, particularly in low light, I knew I wanted it anyway.

I'm currently an owner of the 5D Mk II and the 60D and my expectations were that the Mk III would inherit many of the superior handling features of the newer 60D. I am an enthusiast and not a professional photographer but I do make my living shooting product photography for online sales. For pleasure I shoot nature, architecture, and the occasional portraits. I'm also an avid fan of DSLR video and the fact that these cameras can literally capture Hollywood quality footage with few modifications is a big deal to me and a lot of people in the independent cinematography community.

The much anticipated release of the 5D Mark III was a bit of a letdown to me initially. One of the things I LOVE about the 60D is the articulating screen. The articulating screen is so handy to have and a joy to use in situations where the camera needs to be at an odd angle, such as low to the ground, high above your head or in tight quarters. The other indispensable use for the articulating screen is shooting self-portraits and videos of yourself. As a one-man act, you can't shoot a video and also be in it at the same time if you can't see the screen! So I really couldn't believe it when Canon came out with the specs on the Mark III -and NO articulating screen!? It's a feature that has been in the lower-grade 60D and T3i for over a year and a half already, and here we're paying three times the price of the 60D we don't get it? COME ON, Canon!

Canon's reason for not including an articulating screen to preserve weatherproofing. To remedy this I'm getting the Swivi 5.6" HDMI LCD Screen which is a giant 5" articulating LCD screen that even has FOCUS PEAKING (really cool). I guess I'm making lemonade out of the lemons in this situation. Another feature that didn't make it into this camera that has all the cinematographers grumbling is there is no clean HDMI output which would allow the uncompressed video footage to be captured on an external recorder. This feature would have made this a true high-end movie making machine to rival the $30,000 RED ONE and knock the socks off the Panasonic GH2 and even the AF100. For myself, not a deal breaker... but the Nikon D800 has this.

Probably the most vexing thing that did not make it onto my wish list is the elimination of the rolling shutter problem. It has been reduced a little, but it has by no means been eliminated, so the jello effect remains an issue and impossible to completely remove in post. And so far, there has been NO program that has been able to eliminate it entirely without creating additional artifacts (believe me, I've wasted untold hours trying them all). Rolling shutter has only been reduced by 20% or so and I won't be fully satisfied shooting video until we get the global shutter and eliminate this unprofessional looking artifact altogether.

Continuous autofocus during video? It's not even an option. The Panasonic GH1/GH2 have it, and do it well. And now the Nikon D800 can auto focus continuously during video recording too, and includes face detection to keep subjects in focus. The only option for autofocus with this camera whole shooting video is still the old way: press the AF-ON button, and you'll set a clunky, noisy, re-focus point. So don't think about replacing your camcorder yet. Shooting video with this camera remains a manual focus affair best handled with a rig and follow-focus setup... classically handled as a two-man operation.

Those are my three primary disappointments. Now the fun part: all the great things (and more) that DID make it into my wish list:

1. Live View focusing with half depress of shutter button. The Mk II had a really awkward way of focusing while in Live View mode. You had to depress the separate AF button on the BACK of the camera, then hold absolutely still while you moved your finger back to the shutter button, and then take the shot. The Mk III acts just like the 60D in that you half press the shutter to focus, just as it SHOULD, which is to say exactly like shooting with a viewfinder. And you no longer have to go into the menu and set Live View to Stills-Only in order to get Exposure Simulation: The Mark III has a handy dedicated movie/stills mode switch.

2. Better low-light performance. Nikon has been beating out Canon in high ISO performance since the D3, then the D3s, the D3x, and the D700. It's taken two product cycles for Canon to finally catch up. The Mk II was the low-light king when it came out, and still performs exceptionally well, but the Mk III takes it to a new level. My initial test shots show that ISO 12800 on the Mk III has about the same noise levels as ISO 6400 on the Mk II, but with better sharpness and improved color rendition. ISO 12800 is actually usable for high-quality work, whereas at ISO 25600 things start to fall apart--but still plenty good enough for smaller web images. These ISO settings will allow you to actually get the shot even at night in situations that were previously unthinkable. Most importantly, overall image quality in terms of dynamic range and the quality of the noise at high ISOs has been improved for both stills and video.

The claims were that ISO 25600 on this camera was going to be like ISO 6400 on the Mark II, a two stop improvement. The truth is that it's not. It's just about a one stop improvement, maybe slightly more, but that's still a significant achievement.

3. No megapixel escalation! I was relieved that Canon DIDN'T try to stuff 36 megapixels into the Mk III. They kept it roughly the same at 22mp. Way to go, Canon! It's been proven time and time again that more megapixels doesn't make for a sharper image, only larger file sizes. "More megapixels equals better image quality is what's known as "the megapixel myth" Cramming in more megapixels means a lower signal-to-noise ratio and less full well capacity for each photo site. At some point you don't get more detail with a higher pixel count; you just spread the detail around on more pixels. I hardly ever need 21mp as it is, and I am absolutely relieved not to be dealing with larger files because I often shoot RAW.

4. Exposure bracketing. The Mk II could only do 3 exposure bracket shots automatically; the Mk III can do up to 7. Bingo! But you have to go to page 316 in the manual under Custom Settings to read how. It's not even in the index and the main entry under Exposure Bracketing says it does 3 (the default) and doesn't even mention that it can do up to 7. There is also White Balance Bracketing (redundant if you shoot RAW), but unfortunately no focus bracketing (focus stacking). That would have thrilled me. (Focus bracketing/stacking function is available via the Unified Magic Lantern Firmware for the 550D/60D/600D/50D/500D.)

5. Chromatic aberration correction. A feature inherent to Nikon and Panasonic micro 4/3, it's about time Canon got it. But it's unclear whether RAW images processed with PhotoShop Adobe RAW already have this applied or not... and you have to load in lens profiles manually. I will have to experiment with this.

6. Improved White Balance settings. One of the major gripes I have with all cameras is the accuracy of the Auto White Balance. Sure AWB works fine outdoors in natural light, but in indoor light it's usually awful. Even the tungsten setting is rarely accurate. Invariably I've had to create custom white balance settings on all my cameras using a white card. But FINALLY, on the Mk III, not only is the tungsten setting accurate, even the Auto setting gives decent results indoors.

7. Electronic Level. The 60D has it on the LCD. The 5D Mk III now has it. But get this--the Mk III not only has a side-to-side level, it has a FRONT TO BACK level too! Great for architectural photography. And there's more--a grid overlay and electronic level in the VIEWFINDER. (Once again you must go into Custom settings to set a shortcut button to enable this.) This is way more than I was hoping for and Canon gets bonus points for this.

8. Quiet shutter. The shutter noise from "mirror slap" has been greatly reduced even in Standard mode, and there's a new "silent shooting mode" where you don't hear the mirror at all. This is something I've always wanted in an SLR, and was pleasantly surprised. I guess Canon WAS listening after all.

9. Auto ISO in manual mode. This is so cool. You can set the camera to M, set the exact shutter speed and f/stop that you want, and let Auto ISO choose the ISO for the correct exposure. Considering that this camera gives good results up to ISO 12800, this is a really great way to achieve the exact depth of field and stop motion effect that you want, and let the camera pick the right ISO. Couldn't do this in Mk II. Works with stills and video.

9. Full video exposure control. Speaking of videos, the ability to control exposure when shooting videos has been greatly improved. The Mk II was the camera that started the whole DSLR movie craze. I'm sure that Canon never imagined when they stuck this feature onto the Mk II as an add-on, that it would explode into the DSLR cinematography revolution that it has. But the Mk II was severely hampered by crude exposure control. Now, full manual control is available. Strangely though, only auto ISO is available in Av, Tv, and P. There are more shooting modes: 1080p at 24, 25, or 30 FPS and 720p mode now does 50 or 60 FPS, with two compression options,including an I-frame only compression for better quality suitable for grading.

A whole wave of enthusiasts use the Magic Lantern firmware patch that allows cinematographers to gain access to enhanced functionality like manual audio, zebras, focus assist tools, and more. The Mk III now handles a few of these functions naively such as manual audio (and a headphone jack), plus a video ISO range that goes to 12,800 with 25,600 as an option.

UPDATE 6-2013: A MAJOR BREAKTHROUGH IN THE MAGIC LANTERN FIRMWARE: Amazingly, Magic Lantern has released a version that enables recording of 14-Bit RAW 1080p directly to a CF card. This is a total game changer and a huge buzz in the DSLR video community right now. From what I've seen, the RAW footage blows away the internal H.264 codec in terms of both resolution and dynamic range. It's still in Alpha release, but this development is already shaking up the industry big time! Stay tuned.

10. The 4GB video file size limitation. Finally, Canon has crossed the 4gb file size barrier and supports file spanning. Now clips can go as long as 30 minutes instead of 12. A big improvement, but come on... The Panasonic GH1 & GH2 have been able to shoot video with NO time limitation for years. Continuous shooting is a MUST HAVE for event videographers. Sorry, this wish-list item still doesn't make the full cut. Why do camera manufacturers hamstring this when it's obvious these cameras are capable of unlimited video recording? Thirty minute cutoff due to a European tax law... can someone fix this PLEASE?

There is much more... of course the completely overhauled complex AF system, primarily for action shooters, dual CF and SD card support, and in-camera HDR and other image combining effects...

Biggest annoyance: the AF point selection button no longer controls magnification in Live View and playback mode. This is a big pain when you want to use focus assist in Live View, because you can no longer just use your right thumb... you have to take your left hand from the lens to press the magnify button which is now on the left side of the LCD. I hate when they move a button from the perfect spot to one that is NOT ERGONOMIC. Workaround: You can assign Magnify to the `Set' button which is on the right (but not to the old button which would have been better).

So here's the big question: at list price of thirty-five hundred dollars, should you upgrade? My thoughts:

A. If you are primarily a through-the-viewfinder still photographer shooting in good light (outdoors and flash), it's rather hard to justify the extra cost. Many of us have barely scratched the surface of the creative possibilities of the Mk II, and in many ways this is not a major upgrade for traditional style, properly lit photography. This camera isn't going to make you a better photographer, though some of the new tools like the electronic level are quite handy.

B. Cinematographers: There's already a lot of carping and moaning in the video camps that this upgrade is a big disappointment. I think it's great for part-time video shooters like me, but it's missing a lot of features that the pros were hoping for. Of course if they want all those pro features they can buy the Canon C300 for $16,000. But current users locked into Magic Lantern are probably going to have to wait for Magic Lantern to catch up anyway. They've already got Magic Lantern for the T2i, T3i, 50D and 60D, so it's just a matter of time.

C. Low light / night photographers, action sports, theater and concert shooters, documentary videographers: This upgrade is a MUST! This camera sets a new benchmark for image quality in less than optimal light conditions. That one stop advantage, better color depth and dynamic range in existing light is important to these guys and gals. The image quality improvement in low light is very noticeable.

C. The rest of us. Many pros are going to want this model, if not now, eventually. The state-of-the art feature set is quite impressive; the handling improvement is modest. For hobbyists, the steep price may be difficult to justify. The Mk II is still a fantastic tool and unless you really need ISO 12800 this isn't going to give you significantly better images than you can already achieve with the marvelous Mk II.

My verdict: An enthusiastic Five Stars as a still photography camera; Four Stars overall due to the lack of three important features that have been available from Panasonic for several years already: articulating screen, continuous autofocus during video, and unlimited video recording time.

If you're on the fence about upgrading or even a first time buyer, I hope my review has been useful. Happy Shooting!

UPDATE 4-24-2012: Users have reported and Canon has confirmed that exposure value when shooting in extremely dark conditions may be affected slightly if the upper LCD backlight is turned on at the same time. People have been calling this a "light leak" issue but that is a misnomer. It's really a non-issue. See details in the comments section.

Buy Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS Digital SLR Camera with EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM Lens Now

Some quick observations on the 5D3. Before I go further I should explain I'll be comparing vs. the 5D2 and second, if you need to know about video, I can't be of any help there.

Received camera body from Amazon on 3/23. Lots of new features (5D2 manual is 259 pages; 5D3 manual is 403 pages). For the work I do, I was looking for two improvements over the 5D2: Ability to bracket more than 3 shots and much lower noise. The first wish was granted. As you probably know, the 5D3 does 7 exposures. Nikons do 9, but 7 is almost always enough. Those who need more will probably have a Promote remote anyway. Noise? Well, the 5D3 images are cleaner but I wouldn't say dramatically so. With the default noise settings and long exp NR set on, I'd say it's 1 to 1.5 stops better than the 5D2. Now, with a little Noiseware or other NR, you can get very clean images at 12800 with very little loss of detail so I don't consider this a problem. I guess it was unrealistic to expect the 5D3 to match the very low noise of my D700 but it would have been nice.

It's true that nearly every feature on the 5D3 is an upgrade over the 5D2. Not all of these will result in better images but it's fair to say that the entire "feel" of the 5D3, the layout, viewfinder, displays are all nicer than the 5D2. The two things that may be game changers, IMO, are the shutter and the AF. If you haven't heard and felt the shutter on the 5D3, you're in for a treat. It isn't just quieter; there is much less kick from the mirror. Add the "silent" mode and, wow. I would not be surprised to see signs in the future that say "Please set your camera to silent mode". As for AF, I never had a problem with the AF on the 5D2 so I'm less impressed here. But if you shoot moving subjects, the 5D3 has it all--predictive, wrap around, sequential, selective. The manual devotes 45 pages to setting autofocus.

A small thing that I've been waiting for, a dual axis electronic level is wonderful. For some time, digital SLRs have had an "artificial horizon" that tells you if you are tilting the camera to the left or right. That's nice but in almost all imaging software, rotating an image takes just a second. What these left/right levelers don't tell you is if you are tipping the camera up or down which can be a real pain with a super wide lens. Well, problem solved with the 5D3.

The in-camera HDR is a mixed bag. Output is jpeg only and even at that, it takes awhile for the 5D3 to register the images. (This could be my cards which are Lexar UDMA 400x & Sandisk Extreme IV). Anyhow, it's a fun feature. This brings me to yet another interesting feature. Since the 5D3 has two cards (CF + SD) you can record different file types to each card. In other words, you could have a RAW-only card and a JPEG-only card. I haven't tried this but I presume this would mean that you could shoot everything RAW except in-camera HDRs which, being jpegs, would end up on the other card. I get requests for jpegs so now I can put them on one card while keeping an all-RAW card for myself. You can also have redundant cards for backup, sequential for extra capacity, etc. As with the autofocus options, the possibilities are endless!

So, to summarize. Pros: Better AF, 100% viewfinder with electronic grid (no more screens), better LCD, faster drive and processor, fabulous shutter/mirror, 7-stop bracketing, 2-axis level, somewhat lower noise and thus somewhat cleaner images vs. 5D2, two card slots, uses same batteries as 5D2. Cons: Still no built-in flash (yes, it's very handy), in-camera HDR so-so, mode knob still feels flimsy (and it locks now, so be careful). All in all, this is a very nice, refined camera and anybody trading up from a 5D2 will be happy. And if you do get a 5D3, the person getting your 5D2 will be happy as well.

Just a footnote. One thing that comes through loud and clear from these reviews is how very different people's needs are and how differently they use a camera. I can only explain how a product meets or fails to meet my needs. I would not dream of saying you do/don't need this feature or "read and decide" as if I was some sort of oracle. You know what is or is not important to you and how much you're willing to pay for it. The web has made everybody a professional and an expert but when it's your money, the only expert is you.

Read Best Reviews of Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS Digital SLR Camera with EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM Lens Here

I recently sold my Canon 7D and saved up to get this camera. After hearing so much talk about how much better the D800 is and how the Mark III is not worth the money, I decided to give it a shot rather than be influenced by comments on the web by people who never shot with the camera. Upon first inspection after opening my kit I was impressed at how sturdy and professional the camera felt. I always felt the 7D was very tough and sturdy but the 5D takes it to another level. The grip is great and sticks to your hand. It also covers the batter compartment. The camera grip has a great indent for your hand and an excellent thumb rest. Overall ergonomics are fantastic and the camera has a slick look but is bigger than the 7D at every dimension. No confusing this with an entry or midlevel camera. It screams pro, even without a grip.

The settings were easy to navigate and the dials are all in familiar places for the most part. The new zoom requires an extra keypress but I found it better to use the wheel than the old zoom in/out buttons once you get used to it. The new rate button on the left side seemed a bit useless to me but I reprogrammed it to protect images. The LCD was big and bright and shows lots of crisp detail when zooming in. Also very usable for macro with it's quick focus zoom. The best LCD I have ever seen on a camera. The Viewfinder also big and bright. Huge improvement over what you see using a cropped sensor. This is one of the many reasons to go full frame.

Now onto using the camera. Coming from the 7D I enjoyed pretty good autofocus but the 5D Mark III dominates it in every way. It is super fast, accurate and locks on in really dim light. There are several action modes to select for the autofocus that react to the type of movement that you choose. Really groundbreaking stuff. I found nothing negative to say about it. I spent an afternoon shooting a kids party outdoors with the 24-105 f/4. The kids were running around like maniacs and I came away with many great in focus shots.

In the past when using Auto ISO in manual mode I was nervous when it went to 3200 because of noise. No such case with this camera. Indoor photos without a flash are no problem. Especially when you use a nice bright prime. I can shoot ISO 6400 all day and it will look like ISO 1600 on a 7D. I know most people dont shoot Jpeg but if you ever want some painless shots of your kids or family and dont want to mess around with too much post processing, this camera produces the finest jpegs you will find in a camera. Obviously raw files are sharper and I found the RAW files from the MKIII to be sharp and contrasty. Noise is well controlled though obviously noisier than the jpegs. Overall the image quality is excellent.

A new addition to the camera I thought was awesome was the silent mode shooting. It does reduce your frame rate to 3 FPS but what you get in return in this mode is virtually silent performance with much less shutter vibration. A really awesome and underrated feature. One of the many improvements people forget to mention about this camera.

I have to say there is something special to me about the 5D Mark III. It's a camera that I just have fun with. Its fast, easy to use, produces great results at perfect file sizes. Gives you various options for jpeg and RAW to meet your needs. I'm sorry I cannot review the video but I have not had a chance to test it in detail in order to provide one.

I know people constantly say that it's $500 more than the Nikon D800 but the truth is that it really isnt. In the end you will end up spending more on Nikon gear because it's just more expensive. Just an example.

D800 + 24-120 f/4 = $4,299

5D MKIII kit with 24-105 f/4 = $4,299

Nikon 24-70 f/2.8 = 1,899

Canon 24-70 f/2.8 = 1,375

add the grip, other lenses and a flash and you pay more than the Canon equivalents.

Want Canon EOS 5D Mark III 22.3 MP Full Frame CMOS Digital SLR Camera with EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM Lens Discount?

This was an upgrade from a Canon EOS 5D Mark II for me.

Auto-focus

* As most people know, the auto-focus on the 5D Mark II was a horrible weak spot -only the center point was a "cross point", so none of the other points were accurate enough for fast f/1.2 and f/1.4 lenses, and the focusing speed in general was just not great. Mark III has professional-level autofocus now, with a wide array of cross point locations (exact number varies depending on the lens you are using), and very fast focusing speed. What was a major down-side is now a major up-side.

Low Light

* As mentioned above, the autofocusing is improved, and the differences in low light are very noticeable.

* Canon also claims a major improvement in noise at high ISO's. Personally, I do see an improvement, but not a huge improvement.

Exposure Bracketing / HDR / Stacking

* The Mark II supported only 3 exposures with bracketing, the Mark III now supports 7 exposures -A huge improvement in the software for anyone doing HDR.

* The Mark III has in-camera HDR processing, which is nice (perhaps to get an idea how something looks, on the spot), but not something I'll actually use for final images (I'm sure the processing abilities of HDR software on my desktop is going to be better than in a battery powered camera).

* The Mark III supports in-camera image stacking, which can be used for a variety of creative and scientific effects -I haven't played with this yet, but this may be very useful for me.

SD Card

* Having a second slot, with the second one being SD is a very nice addition, you can now put an Eye-Fi in your second slot, save jpeg to the eye-fi, have photos show up on your iPad in realtime, and have the RAW's saved to a CF card. Great for both pros and hobbyists.

* You can have two 32GB cards, one CF, one SD, and store all of your pictures with two backups in case one card fails -great for pro's.

* The software actually interacts with an Eye-Fi, so you can see the status of what the card is doing, a huge improvement over the hack-ish CF->SD->Eye Fi support in the Mark II.

Silent mode

* Your wedding photographer can now take many photos of the exchange of vows without making it sound like a paparazzi session.

* It is perhaps quiet enough for you to even take a few shots in places where photography is generally frowned on

Burst mode

* 6FPS is a major improvement

Physical feel

* This is something that doesn't really fit on a spec sheet, but the Mark III generally feels much stiffer / heavier / "professional" than the Mark II -much closer to a "1" feel.

Megapixels

* This was of course a let-down to many (including me). I do a lot of landscape photos, and very little sports/clubs, etc ... For my photos, noise reduction can be handled with very long exposures, and low ISO (and other methods). That said, the camera was such a large improvement in every other way, I am still happy.

Learning Curve

* There are so many new features / modes, it will actually take some time and practice (and reading to fully utilize the new body), not a complaint -but I was not expecting this coming from a 5D Mark II

UPDATE: After a trip to hawaii and a few weeks of usage, my opinion has improved a lot, and I've changed it from 4 stars to 5. The lower noise enables handheld macro photography in lower light situations than possible before, and the intuitive improvements to software have really made some huge improvements. While there is a large improvement to the autofocus, but only a minor improvement to pixel count -the very large number of minor improvements in the software have made it to the point that I couldn't imagine going back to the 5D Mark II. Great job, canon!