digital camera
Aug. 9th, 2006 11:24 pmOh, Cannon PowerShot A530, I think we are going to have a long and pleasant relationship. I don't know what half your advanced functions even mean yet, but I will enjoy finding out. The camera is a good size for my hand, has controls that are tight enough not to be mushy without being difficult, and seems to take good pictures. (The real test of that involves a different operator, I suspect.)
It comes with software that I'm ignoring for now; my computer has a built-in card reader and that works just fine.
Conversation with the sales guy while discussing features
I wanted:
Me: I wouldn't object to re-using my current memory cards.
Him: What do you have?
Me: Compact flash.
Him: Almost no one uses that any more.
Me: Bummer.
Him: A gig of SD (what everyone uses now) costs $25; do you care?
I'm pretty sure my current 128MB card cost rather more than that. :-) (And on the other hand, given how cheap memory is, you'd think that as a gesture of goodwill, the camera would come with more than a 16MB card. I didn't bother to peel off its plastic.)
(no subject)
Date: 2006-08-10 02:45 pm (UTC)I think the camera companies sell cameras with the 16 meg cards for the same reason computer companies sell computers without monitors, keyboards, or mice: it makes the prices seem lower, and, well, some people already have good replacements...
That certainly makes sense for higher-end equipment; I have the impression that the tier from which I bought my camera is considered entry-level, so it surprised me a little. But yeah, so long as it's hard to leave the store without ensuring that you have a real card, the model works.