Maintained Kodak

Maintained Kodak Consumer Reports - Digital Cameras Digital cameras, which employ reusable memory cards instead of film, give you far more creative control than film cameras can. With a digital camer...


Maintained Kodak
Maintained Kodak

Consumer Reports - Digital Cameras

Digital cameras, which employ reusable memory cards instead of film, give you far more creative control than film cameras can. With a digital camera, you can transfer shots to your computer, then crop, adjust color and contrast, and add textures and other special effects. Final results can be made into cards or T-shirts, or sent via e-mail, all using the software that usually comes with the camera. You can make prints on a color inkjet printer, or by dropping off the memory card at one of a growing number of photofinishers. You can upload the file to a photo-sharing Web site for storage, viewing, and sharing with others.

Like camcorders, digital cameras have LCD viewers. Some camcorders can be used to take still pictures, but a typical camcorder's resolution is no match for a good still camera's.

WHAT'S AVAILABLE

The leading brands are Canon, Fujifilm, HP, Kodak, Olympus, and Sony; other brands come from consumer-electronics, computer, and traditional camera and film companies.

Digital cameras are categorized by how many pixels, or picture elements, the image sensor contains. One megapixel equals 1 million picture elements. A 3-megapixel camera can make excellent 8x10s and pleasing 11x14s. There are also 4- to 8-megapixel models, including point-and-shoot ones; these are well suited for making larger prints or for maintaining sharpness if you want to use only a portion of the original image. Professional Digital cameras use as many as 14 megapixels.

Price range: $200 to $400 for 3 megapixels; $250 to $400 for 4 and 5 megapixels; $300 to $1,000 for 6 to 8 megapixels.

IMPORTANT FEATURES

Most Digital cameras are highly automated, with features such as automatic exposure control (which manages the shutter speed, aperture, or both according to available light) and autofocus.

Instead of film, digital cameras typically record their shots onto flash-memory cards. CompactFlash and SecureDigital (SD) are the most widely used. Once quite expensive, such cards have tumbled in price--a 128-megabyte card can now cost less than $50. Other types of memory cards used by cameras include Memory Stick, Smart Media and xD-picture card. A few cameras, mainly some Sony models, use 3 1/4-inch CD-R or CD-RW discs.

To save images, you transfer them to a computer, typically by connecting the camera to the computer's USB or FireWire port or inserting the memory card into a special reader. Some printers can take memory cards and make prints without putting the images on a computer first. Image-handling software, such as Adobe Photoshop Elements, Jasc Paint Shop, Microsoft Picture It, and ACDSee, lets you size, touch up, and crop digital images using your computer. Most digital cameras work with both Windows and Macintosh machines.

The file format commonly used for photos is JPEG, which is a compressed format. Some cameras can save photos in uncompressed TIFF format, but this setting yields enormous files. Other high-end cameras have a RAW file format, which yields the image data with no processing from the camera.

Digital cameras typically have both an optical viewfinder and a small color LCD viewer. LCD viewers are very accurate in framing the actual image you get--better than most of the optical viewfinders--but they use more battery power and may be hard to see in bright sunlight. You can also view shots you've already taken on the LCD viewer. Many digital cameras provide a video output, so you can view your pictures on a TV set.

Certain cameras let you record an audio clip with a picture. But these clips use additional storage space. Some allow you to record limited video, but the frame rate is slow and the resolution poor.

A zoom lens provides flexibility in framing shots and closes the distance between you and your subject--ideal if you want to quickly switch to a close shot. The typical 3x zoom on mainstream cameras goes from a moderately wide-angle view (35mm) to moderate telephoto (105mm). You can find cameras with extended zoom ranges between 8x and 12x, giving added versatility for outdoor photography. Other new cameras go down to 24 or 28 mm at the wide-angle end, making it easier to take in an entire scene in close quarters, such as a crowded party.

Optical zooms are superior to digital zooms, which magnify the center of the frame without actually increasing picture detail, resulting in a somewhat coarser view.

Sensors in digital cameras are typically about as light-sensitive as ISO 100 film, though some let you increase that setting. (At ISO 100, you'll likely need to use a flash indoors and in low outdoor light.) A camera's flash range tells you how far from the camera the flash will provide proper exposure: If the subject is out of range, you'll know to close the distance. But digital cameras can tolerate some underexposure before the image suffers noticeably.

Red-eye reduction shines a light toward your subject just before the main flash. (A camera whose flash unit is farther from the lens reduces the risk of red eye. Computer editing of the image may also correct red eye.) With automatic flash mode, the camera fires the flash whenever the light entering the camera registers as insufficient. A few new cameras have built-in red-eye correction capability.

Some cameras that have powerful telephoto lenses now come with image stabilizers. These compensate for camera shake, letting you use a slower shutter speed than you otherwise could for following movement. But an image stabilizer won't compensate for the motion of subjects.

Most new 6- to 8-megapixel cameras come with full manual controls, including independent controls for shutter and aperture. That gives serious shutterbugs control over depth of field, shooting action, or shooting scene with tricky lighting.

HOW TO CHOOSE

The first step is to determine how you will use the camera most of the time. Consider these two questions:

How much flexibility to enlarge images do you need? If you mainly want to make 4x6 snapshots, a camera with a 3- or 4-megapixel resolution will be fine. Such a camera will also make an 8x10 print of an entire image without alteration that looks as sharp as one from a 6- or 8-megapixel model. But to enlarge the image more or enlarge only part of it, you'll want a 6- to 8-megapixel camera.

How much control do you want over exposure and composition? Cameras meant for automatic point-and-shoot photos, with a 3x-zoom lens, will serve snap shooters as well as dedicate hobbyists much of the time. The full-featured cameras in the 6- to 8-megapixel range offer capabilities that more-dedicated photographers will want to have. Two of the more important capabilities are a zoom range of 5x to 10x or more, which lets you bring distant outdoor subjects close and also lets you shoot candid portraits without getting right in your subject's face, and a full complement of manual controls that you determine the shutter speed and lens opening. '

Once you've established the performance priorities that you need from a camera, you can narrow your choices further by considering these convenience factors:

Size and weight. The smallest, lightest models aren't necessarily inexpensive 3-megapixel cameras. And the biggest and heaviest aren't necessarily found at the high end. If possible, try cameras at the store before you buy. That way, you'll know which one fits you hand best and which can be securely gripped. In our tests, we have found that some of the smallest don't leave much room even for small fingers.

Battery type and life. All digital cameras can run on rechargeable batteries of one of two types: an expensive battery pack or a set of AA batteries. In our tests of the cameras, neither battery type had a clear performance advantage. The best-performing cameras offer upward of 300 shots on a charge, while the worst manage only about 50. We think it's more convenient to own a camera that accepts AA batteries. You can buy economical, rechargeable cells (plus a charger) and drop in a set of disposable lithium or alkaline batteries if the rechargeable run down in the middle of the day's shooting.

Camera speed. With point-and-shoot cameras like the ones we tested, you must wait after each shot as the camera processes the image. Most models let you shoot an image every few seconds, but a few make you wait 5 seconds or more. They may frustrate you when you're taking photos in sequence.

Your other cameras. If you're adding a camera to your lineup or trading up to a more versatile model, look first for one that's compatible with the other cameras. If it is, you can share memory cards and batteries. Designs within a camera brand line are often similar. So staying wit the brand you have lowers the learning curve on the new camera for family members who switch between cameras.

Copyright © 2002-2006 Consumers Union of U.S., Inc.

For the latest information on this and many other products and services, visit www.ConsumerReports.org.

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How To Edit/import Kodak Mov Videos With Adobe Premiere Pro/elements

Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter easily convert MOV videos shot off Kodak zi6, Kodak zi8, Kodak Easy Share, Kodak Zx1, Kodak PLAYSPORT camcorder to AVI/ MPEG, convert MOV files to AVI for editing Kodak videos with Adobe Premiere---- Adobe Premiere Pro CS3, Adobe Premiere CS4 Pro, Adobe Premiere Elements 7.0, Adobe Premiere Elements 8.0, etc.

http://www.kodak-video-converter.com/how-to-editimport-kodak-mov-videos-with-adobe-premiere-proelements.html

Download click here

How to import Kodak MOV videos onto Adobe Premiere Pro by converting MOV to AVI/MPEG with Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter?

Q1: I have a Kodak zi8 camcorder and I try to import them into adobe premiere cs3 pro. However, to my disappointment, it recognizes them as audio files with no video. I think it has something to do with XVID.

Q2: I have been trying to edit video that I shot with the Kodak camcorder with adobe pro, but the videos are saved in MOV files, and apparently adobe only allows AVI, MPEG files, and it won't let me import the videos to adobe... can anyone help?

Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter provides you an ultimate simple-to-use interface and high conversion speed so that even novice can finish the whole process with just a few mouse clicks. MOV to Adobe Premiere Pro converting program can easily convert Kodak MOV videos to AVI, convert MOV to MPEG for Adobe Premiere Pro editing still maintaining excellent original quality.

With MOV from Kodak camera import to Adobe Premiere Pro converter, you are free to click the Settings button to adjust video resolution, frame rate, encoder, bitrate and audio sample rate, channel, encoder and bitrate to get ideal watching definition. Four aspect ratio choices are here to satisfy you: original, full screen, 4:3 and 16:9.

How to edit Kodak MOV files with Adobe Premiere Elements?

Q1: I just got this nifty new camera for Christmas. It's a Kodak Zi6 and I really like it but premier elements just keeps giving me problems not to accept MOV videos. Any suggestion?

Q2: I have been using PE 3 for a couple years but it didn't recognize the file type of my Kodak camera. So then I got the trial version of PE 7 and it still does not recognize the videos. What should I do?

MOV files to import to Adobe Premiere Elements converter enables you to import Kodak camcorder footage MOV to Adobe Premiere for feature editing by converting MOV to AVI/MEPG. Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter can manage all popular formats like MOV, AVI, MP4, WMV, FLV, RM, RMVB, MKV, SWF and DV, converting for all multimedia devices such iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, iPad, Creative Zen, Wii, Zune, Samsung Propel, Nokia, Nexus One, Sony PSP, Sony walkman and Sansa.

Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter is a well-designed program, clean and free of spyware. It can also play the role as a versatile editor helping you to crop off black sides, trim out the parts you do not want, tune saturation, brightness, combine all files into one, rotate videos upside down and capture favored images with built-in camera.

Step by step tutorial teaches you to convert MOV to AVI/MPEG for importing MOV files to Adobe Premiere Pro/Elements with Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter

1.Download Kodak MOV to Adobe Premiere converter and install

2.Click Add button to load Kodak MOV video files

3.Select proper profiles

Select AVI/MPEG for importing to Adobe Premiere

Select WMV for windows movie maker, Sony Vegas

Selects FLV for uploading to YouTube

Select SWF for embedding to website

4.Crop, trim and add effects

5.Start MOV to AVI/MPEG conversion

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