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Re: looked fun
by Rob Kaper on Tuesday 04/Sep/2001, @23:27
Crappy Kodak DC215 Zoom. Pictures of items nearby are usually pretty good, however it's a bit blurry often for items in the background and when there's no full light. And it eats batteries. But for only $200 a year ago, it's a pretty decent camera.

Have my heart set on one of the new Fuji models. Those are purty. Especially the 6900, now that's a camera!
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Re: looked fun
by Navindra Umanee on Tuesday 04/Sep/2001, @23:48
Got my hands on a DC3400 (basically an updated DC280) some time ago, although it was recently made obsolete by the DX3600. I like it very much actually -- it takes very good pictures, beautiful colour, strong flash, etc. Once I was even lucky (?) enough to get significantly better pictures than a rival Canon A20 owner under tough indoor/low-light conditions. ;)

And of course, most Kodaks are supported fine under Linux thanks to Gphoto. Overall, I've gotten a very positive experience from the dc3400 and tend to view Kodaks favorably these days.
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  • Re: looked fun
    by Carlos Miguel on Wednesday 05/Sep/2001, @08:56
    Speaking of Linux Camera Support, my new Olympus D-510Z (aside from excellent picture quality) has a feature called "USB-Autoconnect", which is a fancy way to say that the camera behaves as a USB mass storage device. Under Mandrake 8.0 all I had to do is plug the USB cable, and Linux automatically loaded the proper modules and recognized it as a scsi device (/dev/sda1), then I setup a mount point and added it to fstab. Now I can access the camera from Konqui, load/store files, view/generate thumbnails, without the need of the gphoto ioslave...sweet!
    Only one complain: Konqui (or Linux itself?...it'll be easy to find who's guilty ;)) is constantly polling the camera (as the transfer LED blinks all the time, meaning access to the smartmedia card), which in the long run drains more power.
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    • Re: looked fun
      by Navindra Umanee on Wednesday 05/Sep/2001, @12:55
      Colour me jealous, although I don't really like those smartmedia cards. I've heard only good things about the Olympus models, but those smartmedia cards do need some maintaining with those exposed pins and all...
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    • Re: looked fun
      by Anonymous on Wednesday 05/Sep/2001, @17:06
      Many newer cameras can be used as mass-storage devices, including the mentioned Fuji Finepix.
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