tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post2031767166546449517..comments2024-03-18T10:16:55.888-07:00Comments on <b>Everything Else</b>: The $2 CameraMikehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post-45351508489858680492023-04-16T08:31:14.579-07:002023-04-16T08:31:14.579-07:00The nearest thrift store is your best bet. Such p...The nearest thrift store is your best bet. Such places used to be a good source of old film cameras, but those have all gone off the the internet marketplace. However, I still see quite a few of the early digitals in such shops.Mikehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post-22039978563217366112023-04-16T07:55:40.842-07:002023-04-16T07:55:40.842-07:00Where can I buy thisWhere can I buy thisAnonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post-82045629553112079022021-10-05T01:06:10.402-07:002021-10-05T01:06:10.402-07:00Way to support Hong Kong Way to support Hong Kong Anonymoushttps://www.blogger.com/profile/14374177638292679829noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post-68544762990419383962016-04-28T08:51:15.036-07:002016-04-28T08:51:15.036-07:00I'm looking forward to doing a little work wit...I'm looking forward to doing a little work with the Kodak EasyShare, mostly as an aid to recalling the early years of the digital photography revolution. I bought my similar Olympus 360 mostly to supply pictures for my on line efforts on photo sharing sites and in my web site and blog. The little Olympus with its 3.6 Megapixels was perfectly fine for that purpose. At that time most people were still connecting to the internet with phone line modems and some care was required to not upload pictures of a size which would make viewing too slow to be comfortable or practical.<br /><br />As it turned out, the Olympus digital camera was also the gateway for getting me back into photography. I was particularly impressed with the little camera's ability to do extreme macro close-ups with just the press of a button. And, of course, the pictures were instantly available and essentially no-cost. I ended up going back to mechanical film cameras after that, but my next decade in collecting and using film cameras would not have happened without the intervention of the little consumer digitals.<br /><br />The one major problem with the little digitals of those times was the processing that went on after you pressed the shutter button. There was an initial lag after the press in recording the image, which meant you were actually often getting something other than what was intended at the moment. Additionally, the camera then took some time to process what was recorded, meaning that you were forced to wait quite a while between shots, and thereby lose some opportunities to follow the action. Of course, early film photographers had to contend with similar limitations, but film photography was a lot faster and more reliable than what that first generation of consumer digital cameras could accomplish.Mikehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/00776670666673938282noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2265637264058465024.post-35559788674340937992016-04-28T05:01:33.424-07:002016-04-28T05:01:33.424-07:00My first digital camera, the Kodak EasyShare Z730 ...My first digital camera, the Kodak EasyShare Z730 Zoom, shares this body and lens. The Z730 has a 5 MP sensor, which as far as I can tell is the only improvement over your camera.<br /><br />I bought mine refurbished in 2006 when my road-trip hobby was taking off. I'd been shooting a film point-and-shoot but the processing costs were killing me. I paid for the Z730 over the next three road trips by not having to send the film out for processing.<br /><br />I researched considerably before I bought. Philip Greenspun over at photo.net praised this camera highly at the time, for what it was anyway. He liked the wide-ish angle lens and thought it produced high-quality images for its class.<br /><br />I don't need my Z730 anymore but I keep it anyway and shoot it about once a year just because I love the great color I get. There's just something about the color signature of a Kodak digital camera. My youngest son's entry-level C-series Kodak digital has it too. I just wish the Z730 did faster than ISO 400. I pretty much always need to use the flash inside, and I don't much like how the flash behaves.Jim Greyhttp://blog.jimgrey.netnoreply@blogger.com