Archive for June, 2011
Samsung Digital Camera
I have a new digital camera (Samsung Digimax L60) and would often know how to take a photo. Step by step account would be appreciated. Thank you x. Today I found out that…1. Find manual 2. Open manual 3. Read 4. Apply what you read
Digital Camera Clearance Sale
I have a digital camera on clearance at my job, but its without it's box nor its contents. I was wondering whether or not it will be operative(transfer pics on my cpu) without the CD software and usb cord. After speaking to others on the web, I found the answer. Save the photos to a removable memory card and spend $20 for a card reader. This way no additional software is necessary. This is not only faster, but it saves your camera batteries. Your computer or printer may even have a card reader built into it. I have enough USB ports that I just leave it plugged in all the time. First of all, be sure there are some pictures on the card. Plug the card reader into an open USB port. Plug the card into the appropriate slot on your card reader. I use Photoshop Elements and as soon as I plug my card into the reader, it starts its own card reader and displays a thumbnail of every picture on the card. If this does not happen automatically, open your photo editing software. Do whatever you usually do to open a file, but click on the selector where you can change drives. Your card reader will be assigned a new drive name that will be one letter higher than you ever saw before, such as "Drive G:" or such. Then, just double click on the name of the file you want to open and it will appear in your photo editor.
Top 20 Digital Cameras
. I was happy to learn… The $20 cameras have cheap build quality and have very poor sensors and components that take low-resolution images (e. G. 1-2 megapixels vs an average of say 8-12 megapixels). These cameras usually have only tiny postage stamp screens for previewing pictures and have virtually no features apart from taking photos in the default mode. They also often lack a memory card slot leaving you with only a small amount of internal memory to work with. Overall, these cameras are really cheap in quality and produce grainy low-res webcam-like pictures. For about $50, you can get a much much better quality camera that can actually produce decent pictures (decent for the price anyway).





