Archive | 2009

31 December 2009 ~ 3 Comments

Sony DSC-WX1 Camera Review

Sony DSC-WX1 Camera Review

Digital cameras are great… except when you are in a low light situation and need to use the flash! Now you have overexposed faces, red eye problems and dark backgrounds. One of the biggest problems with digital cameras has always been low-light shooting!

Sony has finally produced a CMOS sensor that makes sense! I wrote up a long article about lenses and how CCD’s work long ago but will try and explain it as quickly and easily as possible.

The CCD or in this case the CMOS is the part of the camera that captures the image and turns it into a digital signal. Think of it as being where the film would be in a film camera. Typically the sensors (1 millionĀ  sensors per megapixel by the way) take up only about HALF the surface area of the CMOS or CCD and the rest is taken up by the wiring needed to connect the sensors and make it all work.

Sony has now released their new back-illuminated CMOS sensor that they claim will capture sharper, more detailed images in low light situations and with less noise and more vibrant colors than those shot with standard CMOS and CCD sensors.

How is the back-illuminated CMOS different?
“Standard front-illuminated CMOS sensors are constructed so that light (after passing through the lens) must then pass through a metal wiring grid before striking the light-sensitive pixel receptors. Consequently, some light is lost. Back-illuminated sensors position the wiring grid beneath the light sensitive pixel receptors – increasing light gathering capability by up to 200% over traditional CMOS sensors.”

You can buy the Sony DSC-WX1 camera on Amazon here.


General Controls:
The WX1 is a small camera, but the control array/user interface does not seem busy or cluttered. Dedicated controls have been kept to the minimum. All controls are logically placed and come easily to hand for right-handed shooters. The WX1′s on/off switch is too small and often requires a second push to power up or power down the camera. The compass switch (4-way controller) is also a bit too small and gives off a fiddly tactile feel – which doesn’t inspire confidence (especially for users with large fingers) in its responsiveness. The mode dial is located in the exact spot where most right-handed shooters will rest their thumb when shooting (and the mode dial is easily turned) meaning users will have to suffer through occasional accidental mode changes.

For some reason the camera is auto exposure only (which limits user input into the creative process), it has no optical viewfinder and, unlike similar digicams from other manufacturers, doesn’t provide direct access (via shortcut menu) to the most commonly changed/adjusted camera settings and functions like white balance, sensitivity, and exposure compensation.

Conclusion:
The WX1 is also ultra-compact, easy to use, has loads of neat features, and it’s stylish in a minimalist sort of way – all reasons why it should appeal to casual photographers and snap-shooters.

Pros:

  • Impressive noise management
  • Excellent 5x zoom
  • 720p movie mode

Cons:

  • Slight tendency toward over-exposure
  • No direct access to the most commonly changed/adjusted camera settings and functions

Overall I would recommend checking out this camera if you are thinking about it. It does seem to be a good camera for the price; just see if you can try it out in the store first and you are happy with the controls layout.

You can buy the Sony DSC-WX1 camera on Amazon here.

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30 December 2009 ~ 1 Comment

Your iPhone Camera Sucks!

If you’ve tried taking great pictures with your iPhone, chances are that you may have been able to get one or two good ones but that’s about all. If you want to use the camera and not carry another camera with you, check out these applications that will go a long, long way towards making your iPhone camera into your main portable camera!

Awesome apps to improve your iPhone camera

No, the iPhone will never replace even an entry level digital SLR, but then again it’s not supposed to.

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20 December 2009 ~ 0 Comments

Backup Your Data or Lose it All

My wife is a digital designer with a large national company and is a Photoshop guru. What she does on the computer is amazing! She has created amazing works of art from snapshots of our own as well as for many others as a small side business.

She is awesome with software and I’m not; but on the other hand I’m awesome with hardware and she’s not, so we work together perfectly.

The other day while hooking up her portable USB drive, the solder points for the USB port broke right off! At that moment she realized she hadn’t backed up the data on that drive for quite some time and was going to lose a great deal of important files if she was unable to reconnect to the drive. She wasn’t too happy at this point thinking about all those lost hours of work, that’s for sure!

Usually this is where I would step in to help… but I didn’t know about the problem as of yet.

She spent some time trying to find information online about how to recover the information from the drive and found a post saying to just put the drive in a new external enclosure. Sounded easy enough, so she looked for a screwdriver to open up the housing and take it apart.

Unfortunately when taking out the screws on the enclosure one of them stripped, so she wasn’t able to get it open. Ah ha! Finally she HAD to ask for my assistance, and bounding to the rescue I came! I drilled out the stripped screw and opened up the hard drive housing like a champ. TA DA! See, we men are good for something afterall.

Upon opening the housing we found the portable drive consisted of nothing more than a normal laptop SATA hard drive and a small board that changed the input/output and power from SATA to USB. The USB connector had simple broken it’s solder points and come off and needed to be soldered back on. No big deal. My hands are too shakey to solder very well so it was going to have to wait till Monday.

We did do a quick experiment by lining up the broken solder points on the USB port with the board and taping it down securely with electrical tape, but to no avail. The drive would spin up, but we couldn’t access it through the computer.

In the meantime before I could get it resoldered by one of my employees in my digital camera repair business, she started looking for cheap replacement external enclosures that come without a drive. She found one for only about $12 and happily snapped it up. She quickly and easily installed the drive in it at home in no time and crossing our fingers, we plugged it in. Voila! The drive sprang to life, up popped the window showing the contents and she was back in business.

Once the drive was working once again, backups were made of all her important files to her laptop, my external drive on my computer, and post-it notes that were then stuck to the fridge with magnets… Gee, I hope the magnets don’t damage any of the data… Not a smart backup plan that one I don’t think.

Now that her business had been brought back from the brink of destruction all was well again with the world.

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12 December 2009 ~ 1 Comment

Nikon to Send Email via Camera!

Nikon to Send Email via Camera!

Here it is, a patent filed in June of 2007 by Nikon! They want to send email via digital camera… what do you think?

“… The email for sending creation unit creates a title or a text of the email for sending, based upon at least one of the photographed image data and the email address that has been set. “

US Patent Office Application, Click Here

nikonpattent

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