Wow ... never knew these existed. But you would have a better resolution and quality if you just took the time to draw the image with paper and a pencil.
Same! I really don't want to tell you what I paid for it, it was a ridiculous amount. But, it did pay for itself when my son was born and while he was in the nursery (a bit jaundiced) I could take pics and bring them to show my wife that he was OK. Plus send pics to the grandparents on another continent.
My first digital camera was a 1.3 MP generic no-name with a fixed-focus lens. But I was like 12 and my parents weren't about to drop hundreds on me. Plus it was the year 2000, so anything over a megapixel was amazing.
My camera before that was a Game Boy Camera. It was so bad that you could only really take selfies with it. Anything else was unrecognizable 8-bit pixel-puke. Plus the cartridge held less than 30 pictures and the prints faded within a couple of years, making it impossible to preserve any shots you took with it.
Point and shoot like this is still around, I own a modern Sony one. It fits in my pocket for travel and replaces my huge Canon DSLR and Sigma lens that I have in storage while I’m moving to another state.
The little camera is very practical and can zoom 100x more than my phone and has image stability that blows my mind at its 4k video at full zoom handheld shots.
Usually take modern memory cards, at worst with an adapter
Actual focus mechanism vs. fake digital zoom
Small loss if you drop it in the swamp, get it soaked, otherwise ruin it
Almost all employ high quality gears and lenses and such
Generally take a pair of AAs. (Maybe stay off the units with proprietary batteries.)
Resolution is plenty fine for most use cases. Your pic is getting down-scaled when you share it. We're dressing up and taking 1-year anniversary wedding pics because all we have is shit that was downgraded by being passed around.
Better and larger sensor, producing less noise, meaning less need for noise reduction post-processing that makes smartphone photographs horribly muddy. The first digital camera my family ever owned (2MP, 8x zoom, still functional 20 years later) takes better pictures than my new phone.
Smartphones still take better photos but they compensate for the optics with software. If you stick that large of a lens into a smartphone, the battery would be too small. Not ti mention the extra moving parts required for retractable lens.
I don't have a problem with phones having simple optics. What I think I'd like to reject is the notion that the one device is your cell phone, media player, web browser, camera, flashlight, fleshlight flishlight, floshlight and flushlight, all in one quarter inch thick slab of mostly touch screen.
Let me go back to having a 4 inch smart phone that can do some of that stuff, like I didn't mind my Galaxy S4 Mini's camera, it worked fine. If I'm going to be serious about photography I want a device that is mostly a camera with a good sensor and decent optics. If I'm gonna have a flashlight I want it to fit in my hand and have a properly bright LED with decent optics, if I'm gonna have a fleshlight I want a proper aperture with interesting texturing on the inside and decent optics. My S10e is the worst floshlight I've ever had. I might as well use my foot.
Smartphones suck at taking a picture when you click the goddamn button. The half-decent ones also have burst-first, which is just fantastic, and should be the default for smartphones as well.
The downside is the menus. Setting up a timer is agony. There's two d-pads and a dial and six buttons, none of which are labeled in anything but inscrutable hyper-stylized pictographs, and I swear to god their functionality is randomized every time you access them. It's like a shite SCP that feeds on human frustration.
my wife's sister gave her her old digital photography camera from around 2005ish. she was really excited but that was tempered by the realization that her iphone takes nicer pictures. crazy how far digital camera tech has come in so few years!
I somehow ended up with a fujifilm that had a slot that took an SD card but would scratch it up and corrupt it within a few times using it, or you could use an xd card instead. What's an xd card I hear you ask? Oh, only tech that existed for approximately 5 years and died the same year I bought the camera.
I've made stupider tech purchases but I'm having trouble recalling one at the moment. Perhaps the iphone 3gs was nearly as bad.
I have an Olympus Tough, which I bought because it's waterproof and I can take it out on the water without worrying. What I use it for a lot though is its macro settings, amazing levels of magnification. And both: took some great close-ups of tadpoles in a pond.
I never had a digital camera as i didn't care much for taking pictures of shit. my brother had some point and click from panasonic and so did my father.