Canon EOS Rebel T3I Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm

Canon EOS Rebel T3I Digital SLR Camera with EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS II Lens Full 16GB Kit + Wide Angle , Telephoto + Full Size Tripod + Deluxe Camera Bag + Four Piece Macro Set + Essential Filter Kit + All You Need Accesory Kit
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
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I bought this camera for work. What can I say they did a good job. The kit came as described and nothing missing.

It also was shipped and received incredibly fast. My only complaint is a minor one. Some of the accessories that where included are on the cheap side. But they all work good and for how much the whole thing cost, Its a great deal. I would defiantly buy another one from them for my self any time.

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Square Perfect SP3500 Complete Portrait Studio Kit With Flashes

Square Perfect SP3500 Complete Portrait Studio Kit With Flashes Softboxes Gels & Barn Door & More!
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $1,149.95
Sale Price: $310.95
Today's Bonus: 73% Off
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I wasn't sure what to think of this when I first saw it but felt that it was worth a shot. I was tired of sacrificing my more expensive equipment when on location and wanted something that would allow me to have what I needed when I needed it. For the money (keep that in mind!!) this is a great system. I'm more than an amateur, but a little less than a pro, but have managed to make several of my clients very, very happy while using this setup. Oh, the softboxes are a pain in the neck to set up and the stands are a little wobbly but all in all, I found this to be a terrific deal. I still need one more light and would just as soon not have the gels since I never use them, but everything else works find. The reflectors are a good size, the backdrops will do in a pinch (my old stuff is far better so I haven't given them much of a test).

If you are looking for an inexpensive (all things being relative, of course) break into the world of studio photography, I think you would be hard pressed to find a better bang for your buck. Will this set last you forever? No. But it will help you hone your skills so that as you start to make the big bucks you can start upgrading without doubting your abilities.

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Quantum T3US Turbo 3 325v NiMH Rechargeable Battery Power Pack (

Quantum T3US Turbo 3 325v NiMH Rechargeable Battery Power Pack
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $679.00
Sale Price: $624.00
Today's Bonus: 8% Off
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The Quantum Turbo 3 delivers exactly what it claims to. For hotshoe mounted flashes at full power, you get a 1 second recycle time and roughly 1050 flashes. From empty, the Q3 takes about 3 hours to recharge. If you like, you can even buy the adapter cord to plug your camera into the battery as well. I'm not sure about the performance of the battery in this configuration, but I would imagine you could get many hours of use (minus power consumed by flash).

The Q3 is a bit bulky weighing about 900 grams (two pounds), but if you aren't wearing loose pants, that problem is very simply fixed by clipping it to your belt/pants. This item DOES NOT come with any cords of any kind (excluding the power cord). You must purchase them separately depending on the model of flash you have, and the cord can be pricey (not that it should be a concern if you're buying this battery). For example, the CZ2 cord is just under $50. You can find information about cord compatibility here:

I've owned the Q3 for about five months now, and it has only needed to be recharged once. This includes many sessions of using it and some shelf time. It does lose charge while sitting on the shelf but at quite a slow rate. Quantum states that the battery can be recharged hundreds of times, if you are concerned about the lifetime of the Q3. If you have the money to spend and you are looking for (in my opinion) the ultimate solution to powering your flash while out and about, then this is the battery to buy. There are certainly cheaper and less exuberant units out there, even some from Quantum.

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Nikon D3000 10MP Digital SLR Camera with 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G AF-S

Nikon D3000 10MP Digital SLR Camera with 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6G AF-S DX 'VR' and 55-200mm f/4-5.6G ED IF AF-S DX 'VR' Zoom-Nikkor Lenses + 8GB Deluxe Accessory Kit
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
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I bought this package for my wife as a gift and she is very pleased with it. We didn't have a tripod or any of the other accessories and this provided a very good introduction package. With an 8 gig card and the VR lens' you won't be disappointed with this if you are new to the SLR world. My wife took it to a friends wedding and the photographer joked that she was "competing" with his business. She has not put it down and has taken hundreds of pictures has found the dvd and book very helpful. I don't think you can go wrong with this kit.

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Samsung T139 Unlocked Phone with Camera, Bluetooth, U.S

Samsung T139 Unlocked Phone with Camera, Bluetooth, U.S. Warranty - Not for verizon/sprint users
Customer Ratings: 3.5 stars
List Price: $59.99
Sale Price: $49.99
Today's Bonus: 17% Off
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I was looking for a flip-phone that had good call and sound quality and would be easy to text with. This phone is perfect for both, without any extra features or apps (which I didn't want to spend money on to begin with).

I have owned and used this phone for about a week now, with T-mobile.

It's speaker volume and clarity as well as when you hold it up to ear are both excellent. This is a great simple phone if you are looking for basic functions only. It's nicely sized, not too bulky to fit in a small pocket, and is very light. Connected to my bluetooth ear-piece easily, and worked well. The only thing is the phone is made of plastic which makes me want to get a rubberized cover for it in case it falls or gets scratched. Over all I am very pleased with this phone!

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Canon TS-E 17mm f/4L UD Aspherical Ultra Wide Tilt-Shift Lens

Canon TS-E 17mm f/4L UD Aspherical Ultra Wide Tilt-Shift Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
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First the lens itself is an excellent wide angle prime. Very sharp edge to edge even wide open. Virtually no flare. But it should not be bought for that purpose. The 14mm f2.8 is cheaper (at $2,000!) and faster. The 16 to 35mm f2.8 zoom is even cheaper and much more versatile. Also, this lens does not auto focus and has a big unprotected bulb in front that requires special care in handling.

What the lens does is produce wide angle shots that cannot be obtained from any other lens. In a normal wide angle, tilting the camera so it is not parallel to the ground makes the vertical lines tilt strongly open or closed. The more you tilt the camera, the stronger the effect. Sometimes you want that effect. It can enhance the height of things. But other times you don't. This lens offers the ability to control line tilt or eliminate it altogether. Set the camera so lines are all straight or tilted to the extent you want then shift the lens itself up, down or sideways to capture the desired field of view. The effect is amazing.

But that is not all. Because lines can be kept straight, shooting two or more shots by shifting the lens instead of the camera facilitates stitching multiple shots into very wide angle images. It is possible to get a shot wider than a fish eye lens with no linear distortion.

And that is still not all. The ability to tilt the lens helps depth of field. I won't try to explain the principle (there are plenty of sites on the internet that describe it) but with the camera on a tripod, it is possible to set the basic shot, shift the lens to the desired point, tilt the lens until everything is in focus up to within a very short distance from the lens, take that shot, then shift the lens the other direction with no or the opposite tilt and take a second shot, then stitch the two shots to get an image wider than a fish eye in focus from inches to infinity even with the lens wide open.

This lens is mostly useful for architectural and landscape photography. You will not use it to photograph the kids or carry around town on vacation (unless you take photographic vacations). It takes a lot of work. Basically, the shot has to be set up in manual exposure and focus before the lens is shifted. A tripod is not absolutely necessary but will be useful for most shots, especially if you plan to stitch multiple shots. It takes those of us old enough to remember back to the days when everything had to be set manually. For those not that old, it will be a shock to have to make so many settings. But for certain shots, there is no substitute for this lens.

It is probably a professional only lens. The cost, effort and basic photographic knowledge required means this lens will never hit the mass market. But for those who like to take landscape panoramas, it is almost a necessity.

UPDATE

I recently had a chance to photograph a slot canyon. It was narrow and tall and I thought a perfect place to try out this lens. I did get some good shots but I was much more impressed with the 16 to 35mm f2.8 II. It was a sharp as the 17mm, easier to use and a lot more versatile. Part of the problem with the 17mm was the work required to set up a shot. It took forever and the results were uneven. This was not a place where tilting lines were a problem so I had the highest hope for shooting multiple shots shifting from side to side to create very wide angles. I found that the 17mm would produce a shot that appeared to be wider angle because I could get closer but the 16mm would get the same shot just not as elongated. The 16mm shot was the more impressive for that particular place. At another site I was shooting an arch and found I could easily get the whole span in the 16mm. A two shot stitch with the 17mm was no more impressive and had a problem with darkening at each end.

Bottom line, the 17mm is no substitute for other lenses. It is a highly specialized lens useful when you have to stitch multiple shots or keep vertical lines straight. The 16mm to 35mm zoom and the 15mm fisheye will be better choices for 95% of all the landscape panoramas and canyon shots.

SECOND UPDATE

I recently tested this lens agains the 14mm II and 16-35 II zoom in a simple landscape panorama with the sun in the upper left quarter of the frame. The 16-35 flared the most, to the point the photo was ruined. It had a high quality filter that may have added to the effect but I was surprised with the amount of flare, which was mostly thick uneven rays emanating from the sun and not multi colored shapes across the frame. The 14mm also flared badly around the sun but less than the zoom. It had no filter. The biggest surprise was the 17mm. It had virtually no flare. Slight rays around the sun but a nice effect. Shifting the lens to both sides then stitching the shots together produced a stunning shot, very wide and clear. This will be my choice for that kind of shot in the future.

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Canon GP-E2 GPS Receiver for Canon EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR

Canon GP-E2 GPS Receiver for Canon EOS 5D Mark III Digital SLR Camera
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $390.00
Sale Price: $239.95
Today's Bonus: 38% Off
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This unit has two very good features, but several bad ones.

The Good:

When connected to a Canon 5D III or 1DX, it will put the GPS info in the camera file directly without any other software needed.

The unit can be set up to keep the camera clock accurate. It is important that the GPS and camera have the same time if the GPS data for the image is to be accurate.

The Bad:

1. The accuracy isn't as good as hand held GPS units like the Garmin GPSmap 76CSx.

2. The unit can create a track log, but the only way to see it is to use the included software. That software can show the track or the location of the images, but not at the same time. You must switch back and forth between the two. For me, that is unacceptable.

3. The unit can't be seen by a computer, and the software doesn't allow for any export of the track log, except in a Goggle Earth format.

4. When track log files are uploaded to the software, they are stored in a place of Canon's choosing, and it is a pain to find them. The files are stored as NMEA 0183 sentence and it should be possible to convert them to GPX, etc. with an application like GPSBable.

The problem here is that the NMEA 0183 files are defective and can't be converted with normal conversion software because the files have a token saying that the file is corrupt.

I use the Map Module in Lighroom 4.1 which requires that the track log files be in GPX format. That means I can't use this unit and display a track. Because of these problems, I am returning the unit as I write this.

Wil

Edit

Time went, and the bird flew, and a miracle has happened for the GP-E2 and Lightroom, or any other application that needs proper track log files. Here's the story.

1. The GP-E2 can create track log files in the unit itself. The supplied Map Utility application must be used to gain access to anything in the GP-E2. That includes generating a track log file on the computer. It writes that log file to Documents>My Documents>Canon Utilities>GPS Log Files in Windows. It does that very well.

2. The GP-E2 specs indicate that the files are NMEA 0183 sentences, and they do look like such files, but there is a huge problem. Each track location is marked as invalid by the Map Utility application and renders these files useless in any application except Map Utility.

3. Lightroom and many other photo applications require a different kind of file. Lightroom requires a GPX file so the GP-E2 log files can't be used in Lightroom, even if they were proper NMEA 0183 files.

4. The universal application to convert such files to other formats is GPSBable. Just use GPSBable to convert GP-E2 NMEA 0183 files to GPX files and use them in Lighroom. GPSBable would convert the files just fine, but the problem was that only the header and end portion of the file got converted because each of the GP-E2 track positions are marked as invalid and GPSBable honored that tag.

5. Along with me, at least one other person contacted the author of GPSBable about this problem. In about two weeks, he produced an updated version of GPSBable that worked around this issue, and now GPSBable will convert the corrupted GP-E2 NMEA 0183 files to any of the many other formats supported by GPSBable. This is truly remarkable work.

6. Before GPSBable fixed the problem, the only way I could compare the tracks created by the GP-E2 and my Garmin GPSmap 76CSX was to view the GP-E2 track in Map Utility and the track created with my 76CSX in Lightroom. The Lightroom tracks from the 76CSX were always the most accurate.

7. Now I can view the converted GP-E2 tracks in Lightroom and they seem to be identical to the ones generated with my 76CSX. The photo locations have always been "GPS accurate," indicating that the GP-E2 is a good GPS.

8. GPS accuracy is determined by the number of satellites used, the quality of the computing of the location from that satellite info, and the time interval of the readings. For best accuracy, set the time interval to one second. With that setting, it is easy to see that the track is accurate between +/-10 ft. and +/-20 ft. With civilian GPS you can't get closer than that.

9. With the work done by GPSBable, my rating of this unit increases to 4 stars. It would be 5 stars if the GP-E2 generated proper GPX files in the first place. If you have a Canon camera that this unit works on, I highly recommend it, if you follow what is in this edited review.

Wil

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SanDisk 2 GB MemoryStick Pro Duo (SDMSPD-2048-A11

SanDisk 2 GB MemoryStick Pro Duo
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $35.99
Sale Price: $4.98
Today's Bonus: 86% Off
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I bought this for my PSP to put some movies on it. Let's just say it does its job perfectly. After reading reviews from some of the gaming websites, SanDisk memory sticks actually outperform the Sony ones...(how ridiculous)

The great thing is the memory stick pro duo adapter is also included, so if you ever need to use it on another Sony product, the memory stick duo could work.

On a 2gb stick, I was able to put a high quality full length movie on it. Who needs to buy UMD movies anyways?

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Fujifilm FinePix HS35EXR 16MP Digital Camera with 3-Inch LCD

Fujifilm FinePix HS35EXR 16MP Digital Camera with 3-Inch LCD
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $379.95
Sale Price: $297.50
Today's Bonus: 22% Off
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To be honest when I first got this camera I was ready to ship it back. I was looking for a camera with some manual options that was not as expensive as a dslr. It took me about two and a half hours to figure out why I could not get one decent picture. One thing I found out is that this cameras menu is a little more complex than some of the others I have. Also I realized that although you use AUTO, there are auto defaults that can be changed. In my case some needed to be changed out of the box. I had to change the anti-blur option, remove the toy effect from being the default (I don't know why it would be), and change sharpness. Once that stuff was done I got some decent photos. Some can be viewed in the customer images section of this product page. Again I have only had the camera for 2 days and I am still learning the available options of this camera. I may increase or decrease the rating of this review once I use it a little more. Overall I am happy with this camera. And for those who are curious, this product is made in China.

Update 4/20/13

I have had this camera now for a few days. I have taken about 400+ photos. I own a variety of different cameras; but his is my first Fuji. I have taken inside, outside, low light, bright light, fast moving subjects, macro, landscapes, etc. and the pictures are beautiful. As I get use to this cameras menu and learn the options I am taking much better photos with it. The pictures even at the furthest end of the zoom are excellent! I would highly recommend this camera. The manual zoom, optional manual focus, and creative options makes this camera a lot of fun to use.

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Transcend Information 128GB Compact flash Card - TS128GCF1000

Transcend Information 128GB Compact flash Card - TS128GCF1000
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
List Price: $449.99
Sale Price: $336.99
Today's Bonus: 25% Off
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I use this in a Canon 5D Mk III.

Previously, only using the Lexar 1000x card could get you to maximum fps/burst on the Canon spec chart. That's not the case anymore.

I bought the 64GB version of this card having had good experiences with Transcend cards in the past. I upgraded it from a 32GB 400x Transcend CF card, which is now relegated to a backup card after being blown out of the water by this one.

I put this CF card into my 5D Mk III and turned off all settings such as high ISO noise reduction, auto lighting optimization, etc. (i.e. anything that might slow it down), back button focused on an object and then begin firing. SDHC card was in the camera, but relegated to being a fail over if the CF card filled up (which won't happen quickly, given I'm reading 1600+ shots on this 64GB card shooting Large RAW only). Shutter speed was set to 1/640.

The results are hard to argue with:

Shooting Large RAW on high speed continuous (6 fps), the camera says the buffer has 13 shots. I averaged 18/19 over about three seconds though before the shutter speed/rhythm started to stutter and slow down.

When I put my camera on silent continuous (3 fps, same as low speed continuous), I took over two hundred shots with no stutter before I took my finger off the shutter release button.

When I put it on Large JPEG, I fired of 230+ shots on high speed continuous (6 fps) with no lag or stutter before I took my finger off the shutter release button.

Bottom line: on the 5D Mk III, this 64GB 1000x CF card is more than fast enough for my occasional burst usage, and it's nearly $120 cheaper than the Lexar at the time of this review.

When I copied 1.91GB from the card to my local hard drive using a Sandisk ImageMate USB 3 card reader, it took 24 seconds. Granted, that is in a computer without bottlenecks, and the drive it is copying to is a Raid 0 comprised of two Solid State Drives.

An amazing, fast as blazes card, and given the RAW burst performance and price difference to the competition, a great deal to boot.

**

Edited 3/29/2013:

**

If sports and other situations where you frequently have to do extended burst shooting in RAW + JPEG is on the table, you may still want to consider the Lexar. Per Rob Gilbraith testing method, these are the burst numbers for RAW+JPEG for shots taken in 30 seconds on high speed continuous:

56

58

65

71

71

69

The 1000x lexar numbers on Rob Gilbraith's site are 73 75 shots in the same 30 second period. So the Lexar is a bit faster. Shooting RAW only on low speed continuous, or JPEGS on high, were not a problem.

****************

Edited 4/21/2013

****************

I have to take back what I said about the lexar card. What I needed to do was low level format this Transcend card. And now it's faster than the Lexar. And not by a little bit either.

This is what I did: I went to the transcendusa dot com website, selected United States, and in the Support section, on the Download page, downloaded the Autoformat utility. Be advised if you run it in windows, you must right click the utility and run it as administrator. I then did a complete format, which took several minutes (with my card in a card reader). I put the card back in the camera, and formatted it there.

Same test conditions as before now net the following burst numbers:

85

84

85

It's faster than the Lexar. But it must be low level formatted using the utility on the Transcend site, then formatted in camera.

Please note: the higher the ISO, the lower the burst numbers. I was only able to achieve these numbers at ISO 100. Raising the ISO number consistently reduces the burst numbers. Even at ISO 100, in subsequent testing, I was only able to achieve 84 bursts sometimes. I am trying to nail it down, but I suspect that it is either something to do with exposure or color, or that the card needs to warm up first. I will post any info if I figure it out. Lowest burst number I've been able to achieve since reformatting the card using the utility (at ISO 100) has been 71 shots in 30 seconds.

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Canon EF 28mm f/2.8 Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

Canon EF 28mm f/2.8 Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
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I bought this lens for a couple of reasons. First of all, I picked it up REALLY cheap used (and you can get it quite cheap even new). Secondly, I really wanted a standard-view lens for my Rebel XT. But honestly, I can't say that I am extremely impressed with it. Simply put, the sharpness is just not there like it is with, say, the 20mm f/2.8, 35mm f/2, or 50mm f/1.4. In fact, sharpness ranges from equal to worse than the 28-105mm (depending on aperture). There also seems to be somewhat of a decentering effect, where the right side of the picture is ESPECIALLY soft. And chromatic aberrations are on the high side. Honestly, I don't now how Canon went wrong with this lens, as the 35mm f/2 is a VERY similar design and actually a GREAT lens. Oh, and like the 35mm f/2, build quality leaves something to be desired.

On the other hand, it IS better than the kit zoom. And even though it really can't beat the 28-105mm in terms of sharpness, it DOES beat that lens in terms of contrast and color saturation. Oh, and it is cheap. So it may at least be worth considering. But overall, I would pass on this lens in favor of the MUCH better 35mm f/2. Of course, the 35mm f/2 is somewhat pricier than this lens (but well worth it).

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Olympus Stylus TG-2 iHS Digital Camera with 4x Optical Zoom

Olympus Stylus TG-2 iHS Digital Camera with 4x Optical Zoom and 3-Inch LCD
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
List Price: $379.99
Sale Price: $329.00
Today's Bonus: 13% Off
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PROS

Fast lens. Probably the single most defining feature of this camera as compared to other waterproof options available today.

Takes pictures immediately when you press down the shutter. Very responsive.

Built very well. Bigger than some other waterproof cameras, but feels much more sturdy. I like the trade-off.

Looks nice. Red color is dark, perhaps crimson. Nicely done.

Compartments lock, just like the TG-1, so as to ensure no unwanted openings.

Picture quality is excellent for a point and shoot. Lower light photos are okay. I shoot most low light with a DSLR, and this doesn't really compare, but it is better than the average point and shoot camera.

Flash is quick.

Menu/screens are nicely done. Easy to navigate. That can't be said for all waterproof point and shoot cameras. Olympus has done this well. Viewing screen is pretty clear, too. I like it.

Ability to take it anywhere. This alone has merit. But there's not much use in taking a "lifeproof" camera places if it can't keep up to some minimum standards for photos. The 2.0 lens really helps allow light in for low light situations, and it is exceptional for snapping photos right when you want. Not two or three seconds after you press the shutter.

CONS

Video noise. I bought the TG-1 two separate times. The first time I thought there might be an issue with the unit I had. The video was noisy and had a ticking/jack hammer type sound. Not sure what it was. I returned it and gave the TG-1 another chance. Second time--same thing. Major bummer. Hoping the TG2 would be better, I bought it the first day it became available. The TG2 has improved upon the video noise issues, but hasn't eliminated them. It's like there's a small buzzing sound in the background while you record video all the time, and then there are select moments when there's more noise, probably due to the camera trying to autofocus. I'm not sure exactly how to describe it other than saying that there are electronic vibration noises when the camera tries to focus. Sounds kind of like a little mini star wars laser war. .

Zoom in/out during video. Just avoid it. The sound is overwhelmingly unwelcome and annoying. Some cameras have incorporated silent zoom (or what I would refer to as mostly silent zoom) while recording video. Not this one. Would have been nice.

Other observations

Size. It's really about the same dimensions as the TG-1. Was hoping it would be smaller. Actual dimensions might indicated 0.1 inch smaller in the depth dimension, but I can't notice it.

Sensor. Not sure there's much of a difference between this sensor and the one from the TG-1. It's supposedly a newer sensor, but I am not able to discern a difference in the photos. Both seem to do fairly well. I wouldn't worry much about it, but don't expect much of a difference. There may be some change in the lab or scientific measurements, but real life it appears to be the same.

Better than the TG-1, at least from the standpoint of reduced noise during video recording. But the main issue which made me return the TG-1 is not improved upon enough for me to keep the TG2. I'll admit I'm very picky. It may not bother you, but it's noticeable enough for me to return it, find something cheaper (this is close to $400 really ought to reflect more refinement with the video), and wait for the TG3 or a comparable competitive camera. Would be nice if Nikon or Canon or Panasonic would come out with an bright/fast lens waterproof camera.

The only real downside / achilles heel I see to this camera is the video issues. If I were just looking to keep it for stills, it would be a home run.

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Nokia 808 PureView Unlocked Phone with a 41 MP Camera with Carl

Nokia 808 PureView Unlocked Phone with a 41 MP Camera with Carl Zeiss Optics--U.S. Warranty
Customer Ratings: 4 stars
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This phone seemed nothing short of a dream come true for any remaining Symbian fans -all 3 of us! Prior to its introduction at MWC last February, I was getting a bit dismayed by the lack of good choices out there. I was getting bored with my aging Nokia N8 from 2010, but almost 2 years later, nothing else could match its camera, its offline navigation, its connectivity options, or this may be a bit of a surprise if you read too many blogs its usability. The prospects of another bone thrown our way from Nokia were pretty slim too: In 2011 Nokia's new CEO, Microsoft lackey Stephen Elop, gave the Symbian OS the death sentence and instead hijacked the company as a tool to use in a last ditch (futile) attempt to promote Windows Phone, thus _instantly_ killing off Nokia's then-40+% share of the global smartphone market.

Then out of nowhere came the 808 PureView! My first reaction was "Holy Cow! 41 Megapixels -why? Talk about megapixel race gone awry! And on Symbian, to boot!". Turns out, there are good reasons for both the pixel resolution and the OS choice more on that below. Suffice it to say, I can't remember having been this excited about a new phone since... well... the N8. I simply could not wait for the official US release here on Amazon, and instead purchased the black version from an importer warranty be damned! Of course, more sane individuals will want to get the US version here instead. :)

UPDATE Oct 4, 2012: It is with a heavy heart that I now have removed two stars from my original 5-star rating. The phone overall is spectacular: The camera, Nokia Maps, and the build quality in particular. However, there is a very serious bug that causes spurious loss of connectivity or reboots when connecting to certain 3.5G (HSDPA) cells -see the "Bugs" section below for details. The bottom line is that I had to disable HSDPA, and now get only "plain old" 3G (UMTS) download speeds. While this works OK for light "day to day" use, including live streaming with Nokia Internet radio or downloading podcasts in the background, it becomes noticeably slow as an internet device (or tethered gateway for another device).

UPDATE April 26, 2013: After ten months, hundreds of theories/speculations about the cause, one repair, two more 808 PureView's purchased/returned, and even two unsuccessful attempts at tolerating Android the issue seems to have been magically fixed! Yes, that's right fixed!

Nokia has quietly released a "3G compatibility update" via their Software Update application, though unfortunately not for US customers yet. See comment #75 below for a direct link to the installer. With this update installed, the reboots seem to magically have gone away! And just like that, 808 PureView is finally the dream phone it promised to be!

Back to 5 stars, cheaper data plan, and a happier life. :)

=======================

Camera, Camera, Camera!

=======================

The camera is obviously the main attraction, and is in itself is worth the money. If the 808 were sold as a standalone camera, it would handily beat just about every point-and-shoot camera out there. Even when shooting at 5MP or 8MP, it easily outclasses even more "pro" compacts such as the Canon G12.

The one seeming deficiency that the 808 PureView would have when compared to those dedicated camera is a lack of optical zoom. This, clearly, has to do with size there is no way to fit in the optics required, especially when considering the sheer size of the photo sensor included with this phone. To give you an idea, the sensor is twice the size of the G12, whose 5x optical zoom already gives it a 2-inch thick body when retracted. And compared to most "ultra-zoom" cameras (such as the Canon SX IS series), the sensor in the 808 is 3-4 times as large!

Enter the genius of Nokia's "PureView" technology. This gives you, among other things, "Lossless" digital zoom. (Yeah there are quotes, I'll get back to why).

At full resolution, pictures taken with this phone consist of 34 or 38 megapixels (in 16:9 and 4:3 aspect ratios, respectively). At that resolution, the size of each pixel is equivalent to that of recent 8MP smart phones such as the iPhone 4S or the Samsung Galaxy series. Obviously, photos from those phones can be a bit... meeh... especially in low light conditions. So yeah, scaling up from 8MP of random noise to 38MP of random noise is not really the value proposition Nokia was going for here.

Instead, in "PureView" mode, you will be capturing 8MP, 5MP or even 2MP photos and you will be impressed at how much information is available despite the lower resolution, and at the color "depth" that comes with a much wider dynamic range. You'll truly appreciate how it's not the pixel count that matters, the quality of each pixel. You'll even feel a little bit more smug vis a vis those poor souls who still believe more MPs == better pictures.

The idea is that by "binning" several pixels (photo cells) together into larger "super-pixels", each resulting pixel receives more light (signal), whereas most of the noise associated with shifting and reading the signal from the CCD remains constant. In turn, this means less noise per resulting pixel, shorter exposure times, less blur. Less noise also means more efficient compression, resulting in even smaller file sizes (despite the cleaner picture!).

So why not simply use a cheaper 5MP or 8MP sensor then? So long as the total sensor area is the same, wouldn't you get the same benefits?

There are at least two reasons for this. First, would you even be looking at this phone it it was marketed with a "5 Megapixel Camera"? For all that we decry the marketing race for higher megapixel numbers despite the resulting deterioration in image quality, we are still allowing ourselves to be fooled by it. By placing a "41 Megapixel" label on this thing, Nokia is essentially using metrics that give you a fairly accurate representation of its camera performance vis a vis other smart phones in the market today. (Update April 2013: Manufacturers are getting smarter: The HTC One, at 4 MP, borrows some concepts from the Nokia/PureView playbook).

The second reason is that this allows for the aforementioned "lossless" digital zoom. In other smart phones (with the exception of video recording modes on the Nokia N8, Sony Ericsson C905a, and a couple of others), once you start to zoom in, you are in effect "scaling up" an image from its native pixel resolution, just as you would if you enlarged a picture in an image editing program. You are not adding any detail, you are only blurring the original.

In contrast, the 808 digital zoom works by reducing the size of each "super-pixel", down all the way to its native resolution. So at the far end of the zoom range, you are essentially using only the center portion of the sensor, cropped such that 1 photo cell corresponds exactly to 1 pixel in the resulting image. In simplified terms, you could say that you reduce or eliminate the "oversampling" that PureView otherwise provides.

This, combined with the phone's aspheric lens design and other ingenious solutions, allows for optical performance way its physical size would normally indicate. In fact, in a side-by-side blind test conducted by GSMArena.com, it went on to score higher than the Olympus PEN E-PL2 interchangeable lens (DSLR-like) camera with its "four thirds" inch photo sensor (about 2.5x larger than that of the 808). Granted, these were mostly daytime/outdoor photos at the wide range etc etc -but the fact that this can even happen speaks volumes!

One thing I have not yet mentioned is the awesome video and audio recording quality of this phone. Unless you have professional video recording equipment usually reserved for movie studios and broadcasters, there is nothing else no the market that matches the richness in both video and sound (frequency range, dynamic range) that this thing gives.

============================

The perfect travel companion

============================

If you are traveling, this is really the one gadget you want to bring with you! Some reasons:

* The camera obviously! You can safely leave your compact digital camera or camcorder at home.

* Nokia Maps. Free navigation, phenomenal map/POI coverage. Unlike Google Maps, map data is stored in vector format, so it is much less data intensive (both for download and storage). In fact, data can be stored offline beforehand, so you don't need any data connection at all to use it.

* Other preinstalled Nokia applications, such as Nokia Guides (city guides, restaurant guides, etc) and Nokia Public Transport (very nice and useful if looking for public transit options near you).

* Worldwide 3G coverage. This is one of very few phones, like the N8 before it, that has penta-band UMTS network support, meaning it works on any GSM carrier's 3G network worldwide (including both AT&T and T-Mobile USA).

* Multiple ways to connect to TV sets to share photos, videos, etc, including HMDI, DNLA, and plain old RGB output for analogue TVs. A dedicated "Nokia Big Screen" application provides a nice media centric interface, and can be paired with and controlled by Wii or PlayStation remote control.

Psiloc Traveller comes preinstalled, but requires a license purchase for some functionality (e.g. flight status/updates, Currency Conversion). Free alternatives exist e.g. "FlightAware", "Currencies", etc.

====================================

Symbian is Dead Long Live Symbian!

====================================

In 2010, Symbian was still the world's most used smartphone OS. However, the writing was on the wall; the user interface layer was still largely stuck in the mode of physical keypads, and had not really been keeping up with iOS and Android in terms of usability on touch screens. If this was not clear enough before, it certainly became apparent after the release of the N97, which by all accounts did a lot of damage for Nokia's public relations.

They spent a lot of effort over the next year or so to repair the damage, bringing a much needed facelift and usability updates with the "Anna" and "Belle" releases, as seen on the N8. At the same time, they prepared to eventually replace Symbian with their Maemo, later MeeGo OS, as seen on their "Internet Tablets" (700, N800, N810) and the N9 smartphone. They even purchased Troll Technologies, a Norwegian company that produced the "Q Toolkit" (Qt), a graphical programming environment that would bridge the gap between Symbian and MeeGo.

Meanwhile, they hired former Microsoft grey suit Stephen Elop as their new CEO. Within months, he announced the end of both Symbian and MeeGo in one fell swoop, and instead hijacked the company as a tool to help Microsoft in a last-ditch effort to force feed the Windows platform onto an otherwise unwilling smartphone market. In most countries around the world, the Nokia brand is still held in much higher regard than, say, Samsung or HTC, and having Nokia in their camp gave Microsoft another shot at returning to their glory days, they thought. Well yeah that has not gone too well, has it.

So why then, after all this time, would they now resurrect Symbian from the grave, only to release their newest flagship phone on it!? If their strategy was not confusing enough already, it certainly seems so now!

The bottom line is that Symbian was their only OS that could handle the massive amount of processing required for decent camera and especially video recording performance. They have spent 5 years on developing PureView, exploiting every advantage that the lightweight Symbian OS offers; it is not trivial to get this working on other platforms, let alone Windows Phone.

Now, they have in fact indicated that while they WILL eventually release the PureView technology on their Windows Lumia phones however these will initially NOT have the same pixel resolution and optical performance as the 808. Until processor speeds catch up a bit more, this is likely to remain the case.

UPDATE 2013-04-30: Rumors are firming up in regards to the Nokia EOS/Lumia 1000, a forthcoming 41MP cameraphone like the 808, but this time running Windows Phone 8. Larger, higher-resolution screen, aluminum unibody construction, quad core CPU, more memory... (it needs to support Windows Phone 8 after all) but apparently not quite a match for the 808 in terms of the camera. Judging by pictures, the lens/photo sensor seems smaller; they would also have to overcome some inherent shortcomings in the Windows Phone camera module such as poor white balance, no zoom during video recording, etc. More information should be available around May 14.

==============

User Interface

==============

So, Symbian is definitely getting a bit long in the tooth compared to Android and iOS. Still, I'll stick my neck out a little: It remains the greatest (mainstream) mobile operating system created so far!

Part of the reason is technical, as described below. But just as important, all of its main rivals (Android, iOS, Windows Phone, even BlackBerry) carry with them somewhat uncomfortable tie-ins to their vendor, whether it be:

* excessive restrictions and control of what you can and cannot do with your phone (looking at you, Apple!)

* excessive dependency on vendor-controlled services to transmit and store your personal data. Are you comfortable with the way that Android leads to you to use Google services for contact synchronization, emails, and even implicit uploading of photos (often without your explicit knowledge or consent), especially given Google's ever-more aggressive marketing focus? They are an advertising company, after all...

Among these, Symbian remains the most open system, where you, the user, remain in control of your device and the data on it. To me, this is just as important as any technical reason.

In terms of the UI, in many ways it looks and feels a bit like Android, but perhaps a bit "cleaner"/less cluttered. It's a bit hard to explain but for instance, the drag-down notification panel at the top includes fewer toggles/notices, but somehow more relevant and useful ones. For instance, if a USB cable is connected, USB status is shown, you can then tap on it to view more details or change connection mode. Ditto for Bluetooth, WiFi, Mobile Network, Music Player, etc. In Android, this area is clobbered up with a lot more information, for instance a summary of recent emails, recent software installations, files sent/received, etc; whereas there is no easy shortcut to, say, scan WiFi networks without first going into the Settings menu.

Speaking of email, the default reader is much nicer than the one in Android. A couple of highlights for me are:

* Homescreen widgets of various sizes (incl. a simple icon with a "new mail" indicator) can be added for each email account. In Android, I don't have a quick way to go directly from the homescreen to the inbox of a specific account (e.g. "Work Mail", "Personal Mail"), unless I use a different email program for each account (GMail app for GMail, built-in mail for IMAP, Touchdown for Exchange, etc. etc.).

* A more "professional" quoting style than the iOS or Android readers, where relevant portions of the original email header (sender, recipients, subject) is included in forwards/replies. Also, unlike the iOS reader, retains the original formatting (i.e. does not convert to plain text).

* In the message list, mails are grouped by date; you can quickly select/mark all mails for a given date by pushing on the date separator line. I find this curiously lacking in iOS and Android...

Each home screen is "themed" with its own portrait/landscape layout, wallpaper, etc which helps you organize them by activity.

Aside from being cleaner, the UI also feels less "intrusive" than Android, iOS, WP8. Android, in particular leads you to use Google services for everything from contacts to photos, music, data backups, etc as if Google were deliberately spying on your activities. In Symbian, synchronization of various types of data tend to be more explicit (for instance, import photos into iPhoto, explicitly synchronize contacts, etc).

Finally, Symbian feels less like an Advertising platform than Android and iOS. While there are thousands and thousands more applications for these latter platforms, often they contain adware that is not present in (sometimes more basic) Symbian equivalents. Cue Nokia Internet radio vs. the likes of TuneIn, XiiaLive, or MediaU for Android which are all more flashy, but because of the ads, also more cluttered. Or an even more stark example: Endomondo Sports Tracker on Symbian is free (and ad free), vs. the Android version which is ad supported (or $5 to remove ads).

============

Applications

============

That brings us right to the topic of applications. As you would expect, once Elop gave Symbian the death sentence, and moreover, that the Qt application environment would NOT be ported to Windows Phone, he also completely removed any remaining incentive for application developers to support this platform. Some of the main "pain points" for me are:

* There is no Netflix application. (You can however download and watch videos from Amazon via the Amazon Unbox client for Windows; or rip from your DVDs with Handbrake (handbrake.fr)).

* There is no Amazon Kindle. No Google Play Books. (Go get a tablet. Or use Ionic reader to read non-DRM books from O'Reilly, Project Gutenberg, etc).

* There is no IMDB, Fandango or other application to browse movie listings and show times. Google search works somewhat, but is a bit klunky.

* Skype only supports voice calls, not video. MAYBE this will happen now that Skype is owned by Nokia's new sugar daddy, but I would not hold my breath. Meanwhile, there is always Fring.

That said, many of Nokia's own applications are very nice, and often unexpectedly useful. For example:

* Nokia Situations, available from Nokia Beta Labs. This switches your profile, desktop background, sound themes, etc based on conditions such as GPS Location, WiFi access point, calendar entries, time of day. I have my phone set up to automatically turn to "Meeting" mode (muted ring tone, vibrations) while in meetings, and Offline once I arrive at my home. UPDATE: This is now discontinued, but the developers have made their updated "Situations" application available via the OVI Store. Highly recommended it's much simpler to use and works better than, say, the "Tasker" application for Android.

* Wellness Diary, also from Beta Labs. Once it is installed, it uses the accelerometer and some nifty logic to count your steps, similar to a pedometer, and records a diary for you. In combination with a GPS tracker application like Endomondo Sports Tracker, this provides an excellent way to keep track of your physical activity.

* Car Mode, available in the OVI Store. Makes the phone easier to use while driving. The main screen consist of only 3 large buttons: Call, Drive and Music. Can be set up to launch automatically once connected to your Bluetooth car stereo.

* Nokia Internet Radio, which lets you listen to streaming radio from hundreds of preloaded stations around the world, or you can add your own. (I use this to listen to the "pledge free" stream from my local public radio station during pledge season, as well as to radio from abroad).

* Nokia Sleeping Screen, which takes advantage of the battery savings of the OLED screen technology to give you some visual indicators (clock, message/calendar alerts) while the device is in standby/sleeping mode. Several themes are available, ranging from plain and functional to silly (Yes Nokia engineers can be goofy too at times) or you can even use modified versions of your own images.

Symbian is also the last remaining smartphone OS (aside from BlackBerry to some degree) to support Java MIDlets applications written on the J2ME platform that was pretty much universal in most phones until the iPhone came along. There are still quite a few of those floating around; for instance I have installed:

* Emulators for the Casio FX-601P and HP-45 programmable calculators (for the nostalgic in you)

* UpVise, a suite of applications to create and synchronize notes, shopping lists, etc. between your computer (via their website) and your phone.

Finally, if you are not satisfied with the likes of QuickOffice, the "real" Microsoft Office (including OneNote, Lync, etc) is available as a Software Update. Personally, I am sticking with QuickOffice for (mostly viewing) the occasional Word or PowerPoint document.

============

Connectivity

============

Nokia phones have traditionally been far ahead with regards to connectivity options. For instance, TV connectivity via HDMI, DNLA or plain old TV-out has been supported since the N8. Symbian also has the most complete Bluetooth stack found anywhere:

* When playing music to your car stereo, track information is also shown (if supported by your stereo)

* Bluetooth HID for keyboard and mouse support since the N95.

* As soon as you pair with your computer, you can instantly browse the phone's filesystem just like any other storage volume.

In fact, if you plug it into a monitor via HDMI and a Bluetooth keyboard and mouse, and applications such as the PuTTY SSH client (Search "PuTTY for S60"), "RFB Touch" (a VNC viewer), Microsoft Office or QuickOffice, etc., you'll have an ultra-portable little mini-computer while on the go.

The 808 is also one of (still) very few phones that has support for Near Field Communications (NFC), which means that as this protocol gets accepted, you can in theory use this phone as your transit pass, to make payments, etc.

That said, the 808 brings with it a couple of disappointments as well:

* Mac Specific: Since Apple have removed the iSync application from Mac OS X 10.7 (Lion), Nokia no longer builds iSync plugins for their phones (even for those of us who run older versions of OS X). This means that there is no easy way to synchronize contacts, calendar and tasks directly with your Mac though various "online" options exist (e.g. Nokia Sync, MS Exchange). For better or worse: No good solution for Google Contacts synchronization though.

* WebDAV support has been removed from the File Manager. This means that you need 3rd party applications to access remote file shares, such as myExplorer (SMB/CIFS), Davi (WebDAV) or PaderSync FM (multiple options).

* "Tethering" your phone's internet connection with other nearby devices, such as a laptop or tablet, is a bit more cumbersome with the 808 than with previous phones, at least in the US.

Wi-Fi tethering is possible via third party applications such as JoikuSpot, but it only works outside North America. When attempting to start JoikuSpot while connected to AT&T's or T-Mobile's network, you'll get a "Connection Unavailable" message.

The Bluetooth "DUN" profile allows you to share your connection with a Bluetooth enabled laptop or an Android tablet, but does not work for iPad. (Simply pair your tablet/computer with the phone).

USB tethering works well with a Mac or a PC. (Use the "Nokia Suite" connection profile for a Mac, or "USB Modem" for a PC).

=============

Stuck in Time

=============

Since Nokia are putting less effort into Symbian these days, we cannot expect to see much in the way of new features in the OS. For instance:

* No 4G (LTE) network support. In fact, this phone only supports speeds up to 14.4 Mbps (HSDPA), not even the 22 Mbps HSPA+ technology that T-Mobile USA (misleadingly) labels "4G". Then again, everything about this phone is less data intensive than on Android: Offline maps/navigation, map data stored as vector data and not images, no automatic (and unwilling?) synchronization of photos with Google+, etc. All in all, your battery will thank you!

* No multi-core CPU support. However, Symbian is very lightweight when it comes to resource use, and unlike Android, does not really NEED any more CPU cores to be usable. Certain tasks, such as video recording, are aided via a dedicated DSP.

* Screen resolution is WVGA (640x360 pixels). Most people won't notice, though. In fact, the screen looks brilliantly crisp and vibrant much more so than on my wife's Samsung Galaxy Note (5.3" screen, 1280x800 pixels). However, these specs do not look so good in phone reviews where the reviewer (literally!) puts the screen under a magnifying glass.

* The standard web browser is getting a bit long in the tooth, and not really performing by today's standards. You can get some speed boost by installing Opera Mobile or Opera Mini, but in that case you loose support for Adobe Flash.

* The standard QWERTY touch pad is a bit outdated and cumbersome to use. Much like the iPhone's, where you need to switch layout to enter numbers or symbols, then back again. A better one IMO is Swype, which is of course famous for its "sliding" motion to generate common words, and which supports long-press for alternate symbols, and even-longer presses for nearly every character you can think of. It can be downloaded from the Nokia Store do NOT get it from Nokia Beta Labs (see below)!

That said, the UI has undergone quite a bit of polish leading up to Nokia Belle (the version of Symbian that's included here). Similar to Nokia's own Maemo/MeeGo OSes as well as Android, home screen widgets are now variable size; a notification panel can be dragged down from the top, etc.

====

Bugs

====

I find that the most useful parts of reviews are often the description of what does NOT work as it should. To be sure, there is some of that in the 808 as well.

* As mentioned in the introduction, this phone stability issues with certain HSDPA (3.5G) networks, where it will from time to time reboot on its own. You should install the "3G Compatibility Fix" in order to get this fixed. Or, if you don't plan on using data much, you can disable 3.5G (HSDPA) and revert back to "plain 3G" (UMTS) speeds:

Settings -> Connectivity -> Admin. settings -> Mobile Network -> High speed packet access -> Disabled.

* The "Nokia Multimedia Transfer" tool for Mac OS X does not seem to receive updates anymore, and the version that currently exists does not correctly import photos into iPhoto. This is not a huge issue though, since your Mac will natively recognize this phone as a camera when plugged in via USB however it will then attempt to import ALL photos stored on your phone (including wallpapers, contact photos, podcast icons, etc) so you will want to select which photos you want to import each time. NMT is still useful to synchronize music and videos with iTunes though you can also use other (3rd party) tools such as Salling Media Sync for the job.

* Nokia has not yet fixed an issue that appeared in the original Belle release, where you will not be able to connect to certain "enterprise" WiFi networks that are secured with the EAP protocol. (802.1x, PEAP, etc). :(

* Google Maps will crash/exit unless WiFi is enabled. In any case, the Symbian version does not seem to be receiving updates anymore, and the most recent version available is a bit more clunky than Nokia Maps (for instance, lacking pinch-to-zoom functionality).

* The reason I mentioned "Endomondo Sports Tracker" above is that its more famous competitor, named simply "Sports Tracker" (originally "Nokia Sports Tracker" from Nokia Beta Labs) does not work gracefully with the GPS in the 808. It acquires a GPS lock almost instantly, but then loses it just as fast. To use it, you'd have to keep the GPS alive with another application (like, say, Endomondo or else utilities such as "GPSInfo"). Yeah thanks but no thanks, I've switched to Endomondo.

* DO NOT install Swype 2.1 Beta (from Nokia Beta Labs) on this phone! While Swype 1.0 from the OVI store works fine, the Swype 2.1 split keyboard design conflicts with the Belle Feature Pack 2 release, and the keyboard will be covering the input field into which you are typing. Moreover, uninstalling Swype 2.1 Beta does not work cleanly, so downgrading back to v1.0 will not work correctly! (The Swype keyboard will not be effective until you perform a hard factory reset). So: Stay away from Swype from Nokia Beta Labs!

==============

Practicalities

==============

* This phone uses a micro-SIM. If you don't already have one, you can cut your mini-SIM using a micro-SIM Cutter. Be careful though, there are some reports of contacts shorting against the metallic area of the SIM tray, thus causing instability and reboots of the phone. If you are queasy about this, better go get a new micro-SIM from your local AT&T or T-Mobile retailer.

* It supports micro-SDXC cards just fine. I currently have a 64GB card in mine, for a total of 80GB storage. :) One caveat I found is that this does always work so well over USB in "Mass Storage" mode (perhaps because older desktop OSes lack SDXC support and/or lack of support for the ExFAT filesystem normally used on these), but "Media Transfer" and "Nokia Suite" modes work just fine.

* I highly recommend getting a cover for this phone. The metallic area around the camera window on the back is a bit prone to scratches, especially since the phone normally rests on it. Also given the ergonomics of the phone, it is a bit prone to slipping out of your hands when holding around it. I have had mine flung into the air and back down on hard concrete but thanks to the cover, not a single scratch! :)

* The USB charging port is on top. Perhaps for this reason, there are no vehicle dash cradles made specifically for this phone. Brodit used to make some (sold through ProClipUSA) for older Nokia phones (their N8 cradle was really quite nice!), but the charging port on top probably made this less of a value added proposition. The silver lining is that you could just use their generic cradle, and thus be able to accommodate the phone even with a cover. :)

* This phone can act as a flashlight, using its LED autofocus/video recording beam. Hold down the lock/unlock key on the right side for 2-3 seconds to turn on/off.

* Some people complain that this phone is expensive. Keep in mind that it is unlocked, not subsidized by a contract. This pays off in the long run. If you have a "Data Unlimited" plan from AT&T, you pay $15 or $10 per month; compared to their smartphone data plans where you pay $30/month for 3GB of data. That adds up to a difference of $360-$480 over the 2-year contract term for one of their smart phones. (T-Mobile also offers some discounts when you "Bring Your Own" phone, though lesser).

===============

The Bottom Line

===============

I realize that this is not a phone that will satisfy everyone. Most users are more likely to be swayed by metrics such as CPU frequencies, screen resolution, fastest downloads, number of applications in their respective "app stores", and counterproductively as far as the camera goes a ridiculous attention to slimness. Oh, and sticker price honest or not.

Having used Nokia phones for a while now, I simply could not see myself compromising in specific areas, such as multitasking capabilities, connectivity options, attention to protecting your data, and most of all of course, the camera. (My previous phones were the N8, the Sony Ericsson C905a, the N97, and the N95 all the "top" camera phones of their time).

So despite the flaws mentioned in this review, once you have this phone set up and working as it should, there is nothing on the market that can match this phone for what it is. While CPU benchmarks will render today's top Android phone completely obsolete within 6 months from now, and the industrial design of the new iPhone will make last year's model look like a "has been", the 808 PureView will reign supreme in its niche for years to come it's just that far ahead! Even Nokia are unlikely to match its camera performance anytime soon, now that Damian Dinning, the person mainly behind Nokia's PureView technology, has left for a position at Jaguar

Click Here For Most Helpful Customer Reviews >>

Panasonic DMC-FZ150K 12.1 MP Digital Camera with CMOS Sensor

Panasonic DMC-FZ150K 12.1 MP Digital Camera with CMOS Sensor and 24x Optical Zoom
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
Buy Now
This camera is everything the FZ100 is and they fixed all the shortcomings to produce the FZ150. The buttons in the back of the 100 were too easy to push. I was constantly pushing the playback button when holding the camera with one hand. No more. The button is recessed and the problem is gone. Most if not all the accessories that work on the 100 also work on the 150. Aftermarket batteries actually show capacity now!

When focusing, when the camera focuses it beeps now so you don't have to be looking at the screen. That is great for using Red Dot Sights on this camera. Night shots are awesome with the Handheld Night Shots Mode. It takes several pictures and combines them for great shots with no blur. The camera has way less noise then the FZ100. Even at ISO 1600 and ISO 3200 the noise is better than the FZ100 was in ISO 400. Camera focus in the picture mode and in the video mode is much faster. You can take 12 frames per second burst inside now at all ISO's. The 100 will not do that.

The camera works great in iA (intelligent auto) were the FZ100 was real noisy in that mode. The camera will zoom to 62.4X in the 3mp picture mode with I-Zoom turned on. I like setting the camera at 8mp picture size, which gives me 39.1X zoom. It records in 1080P video!

The flash works great! It goes out over 30 feet and lights up the rooms very well. I will post some pictures of that. Pictures are very sharp, not noisy, and crisp.

This camera is everything that the FZ100 is and much more. This camera is a REAL WINNER! Great job Panasonic!

I just went outside and put the camera in the 12 frames per second mode, shot 12 shots, waited 1 second, shot another 8 shots, waited another second, shot another 8 shots.

Someone mentioned the Canon SX40IS, so I checked it out. The cameras are similar in a lot of ways. Each one has it's strengths and weaknesses. The killer for me is the burst mode. The Canon will shoot at 10 frames per second for 8 shots. The Panasonic will shoot at 12 frames per second for 12 shots. Not that much different there. The part they don't tell you is the Panasonic after taking the 12 shots, wait 1 second, you can take another 8 shots, wait one second, another 8 shots. In the 5.5 fps burst it will go 30-35 shots before slowing down. The Canon will not do that. At 5.5 fps in Auto Focus the camera will go 30 to 35 shots and focus between each shot. In the Canon the rate of burst in Auto Focus is .8 fps. Yes, .8 frames per second. Less than 1 frame per second and focus in between shots. That in my opinion is a deal killer. That is exactly why I chose the Panasonic FZ100 over the Canon SX30IS. It is just too slow for any kind of action shots.

I was at an Animal Safari this last Sunday and had a problem with the camera focusing on the bars of the cage instead of the animal. Sometimes it focused on the animal and sometimes it would not. Finally I used the button on the left side of the lens. It is a ZOOM/FOCUS button, and to change it to a zoom, go to Menu Set, Setup Menu, Page 2, the third one down (Side Lever) and change it to ZOOM or to FOCUS. I changed it to FOCUS and put the focus lever in manual focus. From that point on I had no trouble focusing the bars out of the picture. This camera is awesome!

Another thing that happened to me is I was inside a display area. It was dark inside. All the displays were encased in glass so flash was out of the question. I was in Aperture Priority and for some reason the pictures kept coming out too bright. I changed the Aperture, no help. Then I put the main dial in iA (intelligent auto) and took a picture. It came out perfect! The FZ100 was always a problem in iA, usually because of the noise. Not this camera! It gets it perfect every time. If you are a novice and don't want to mess with camera controls, this is the camera for you. Anyone can shoot it and get great pictures as long as they can frame a shot and push the shutter release button! If you want to take full control, fine, the camera will do that too. This camera is great for the novice and the experienced photographers! Panasonic got it right this time!

I have noticed that my camera tends to be towards the warm side in color temperature in Auto White Balance. That is totally adjustable and it is explained on pages 114 and 115 of the manual.

I am listing this and guarantee it will get someone. If you try to take a picture with the flash and it will not go off, the flash is open and it is dark enough for it to go off and it does not....... Your camera is in the Burst Mode!!!! That gets lots of people all the time.

Part of the picture on playback is flashing in black and white.... Your HIGHLIGHT is turned on and the picture is saturated in the black and white saturated area.

To turn it off go to the SETUP menu, page 3 at the bottom.

Did you know that you can take a snapshot or a burst of pictures while taking video? This camera will do that. The picture size is 3.5mp. You can record up to 40 pictures per video. Look in the manual on page 38.

You shot a really cool video and want a snapshot from it. Simply play the video back in the camera in the play mode, and pause the video where you want the shot, press Menu Set, it asks SAVE THIS IMAGE? Highlight YES and press Menu Set! Done. You have saved a picture from the video that you took. I can't seem to find that in the manual but am still looking. It works just the same. I think the picture size is 2.5mp, but can't find it in the manual.

The camera has a live Histogram so you can see the picture readout before you shoot it. Go to Menu Set, SETUP, Page 3, second one down. To move from one page to the next, simply pull the zoom lever to the right. To go down move the zoom lever to the left.

The camera will take 5 flash shots in quick succession. To do that, go to SCN on the main dial, go to the second row, the forth one down. Pick your picture size and press Menu Set. It will now take 5 quick flash pictures by holding the shutter release button down. Make sure you open the flash.

The camera will take 220 frames per second in the video mode. To do that go to SCN again and go to the second page and it is the middle icon. HS

If I was using any of the priority modes at night (I would use iA in this camera) go to Menu Set and the REC mode, on the first page under PHOTO STYLE, I would use Natural as it is more sensitive to light. It may be a moot point as iA (Intelligent Auto) is better for low light.

This camera works really well all the way to ISO 1600 in low light areas. ISO 3200 works too, but is more noisy.

I have the Vivitar DF-383 flash that I use on this camera. It is a very powerful flash and is much cheaper than the Panasonic Flash. It is not quite as powerful as the top of the line Panasonic Flash but half the price. Make sure you get the Vivitar DF-383 flash for Panasonic.

DF-383 Power Zoom AF Flash for Panasonic

I would get a remote shutter or a interval timer for this camera. The camera has to be powered to use for time lapse photography and an interval timer, but if you push the EVF (Electronic View Finder) button to shut down the LCD, the drain on the battery is minimal. I took a 3 hour time lapse video this way and the battery showed 1 mark down from full charge at the end.

Aftermarket batteries now show capacity in this camera. They are much cheaper than Panasonic batteries even though the Panasonic batteries seem to be dropping in price.

An external mike can be used on the camera, but be advised it takes a 2.5mm plug instead of the 3.5mm plug that normally comes on external mikes. Amazon sells an adapter for cheap that will adapt the plug. Rhode Mikes work on this camera.

Teleconverters work well on the FZ150. There are 5 main ones that work well. Don't waste your money and buy the cheap 2X and larger teleconverters. Two of them are Olympus Lenses. They are the TCON-17 (1.7X with no letters behind the number. It looks like a pear.), and the B300. The Olympus lenses are no longer made and can be found on Ebay. Nikon makes the TC-E15ED (1.5X).

Panasonic makes a 1.7X lens as well. , The last lens is a Raynox DCR-2025 Pro (2.2X).

This camera has excellent stabilization and I am able to shoot at 39.1X (8mp picture size with I-Zoom turned on) without blurry photos during the day with no problems.

This is my opinion and others may disagree. Don't connect the camera to the computer and risk damaging it. Pull your SDHC card out of the camera (it takes a whole 1/10 second to pull your card out of the camera, just open the door and push on it) and put it into the computer if your computer has a SDHC card reader. The software supplied with the camera will know you put the card into a reader and it will prompt you to download the files, both video and photo. If your computer doesn't have a SDHC card reader, buy a good inexpensive USB card reader. They are only around $15 or so. It is much faster and safer and less hassle to pull your card out of the camera to download the files. Just do it.

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Samsung Galaxy S4, Black 32GB (Verizon Wireless)

Samsung Galaxy S4, Black 32GB
Customer Ratings: 4.5 stars
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If you are looking to purchase the 32 GB model, there's no doubt are concerned about the issues with storage space on the 16GB model. Rest assured, out-of the box, this model has 23GB free. It is worth the money.

While others have written volumes about this device and its specs, here are the main things I have noted. I previously had a Galaxy S3.

There is no lag on this phone. It seems to be just as optimized as the Galaxy S3. That said, it doesn't seem to be any faster. I think we are hitting the ceiling on what fast performance feels like in the Samsung Touchwiz UI. While there are plenty of videos on the web telling you how to enable developer options (for some reason they are hidden initially), and to disable the animation settings, these changes not needed. Don't worry about lag, especially if you are upgrading from an S3. If you are interested, Quadrant scores are double that of the S3. While Quadrant scores vary from run to run, you can expect something in the 12000 range.

I do not like the new tabbed Settings. I am used to the single screen and scrolling to find the options I need. Now things such as Applications are in the More tab. Why? It really seems to be an issue of it just didn't fall into the other categories. If the categories don't make sense, why have them?

The body of the phone is is streamlined when compared to the S3. It feels better in the hand and is "relatively" the same size body with a larger screen. Battery life, (after one day of use) is great. One day is obviously not much of a sampling, but I can say I am happy with it for my use (emails, web browsing, photos, some apps weather, news, stocks, etc).

I find it more difficult to remove the battery door because of the side placement of the fingernail slot. It was better on the S3 on the top of the phone.

Other than those minor things, this s a great phone. It is a great upgrade. This particular model has no storage concerns.

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Moultrie D55-IR Game Spy 5 Megapixel Digital Infrared Game

Moultrie D55-IR Game Spy 5 Megapixel Digital Infrared Game Camera
Customer Ratings: 3.5 stars
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Firstly, I want to make clear that I'm not using this camera for its intended purpose; I'm using it to try and find my lost cat by locating the camera near where he's been sighted, and then placing food to attract cats.

That being said, the camera has worked perfectly for my needs. It is easy to set up; the quick start guide steps you through setting up the time, photo/video, photo resolution, number of shots per trigger, and period between triggers. It has a nice, long adjustable strap for placing around trees, fence posts, etc. The camera's heavy-duty case is also lockable, as long as the lock has a small bar. I used a small padlock which is locked to a cable bike lock and the camera. At one feeding station location, the camera was vandalized by kids who tried unsuccessfully to remove the camera; failing at that, they tried to smash the lens. They managed to scratch the plastic lens shield, but the camera still takes good photos despite the scratches. The plastic covering of the digital info display was cracked open as well, but the camera still functions perfectly.

The night-vision works very well. I have placed the camera at a maximum of 3 feet from the feeding station, and can easily tell on the night photos whether a cat is black, gray, white, or tabby. The camera also has an aim feature that allows you to determine where the lens is aimed for optimal placement.

I was also concerned at first, because I'd heard that some of the game cameras won't detect smaller animals like cats. This camera has captured 7 different cats at 3 feeding station locations (none of them was my cat, sadly), as well as people walking by, crows, dogs, and bushes waving in the wind. I imagine that, if I were a hunter, I would find this to be a very useful tool for spotting game. I also am favorably impressed by the battery life. This camera has been running more or less constantly for 2 weeks straight on 6 C-cells, and the battery life indicator is at 89%. At this rate, I don't anticipate needing to replace the batteries for a couple of months. If I were placing this out in the bush, I would be able to rely on it staying on for quite a long time without needing to be babysat; I think the SD card would fill up before the battery ran out.

I give it 4 stars because there is no on-board memory, and it requires an SD card in order to operate. Also, there's no onboard display, so if you were a hunter, you'd either need to take the SD card all the way home to review the photos, or take your laptop out to the bush with a card reader. Not ideal. I have no idea if the photos taken by the Moultrie would show on another digital camera's display or not; I know other game cameras have problems with this kind of cross-compatibility. The camera does have a USB out feature, but that apparently only works for PCs, and I'm a Mac user.

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Sony DSLR SAL-70200 70-200 F/2.8 Ssm Telephoto Alpha Camera Lens

Sony DSLR SAL-70200 70-200 F/2.8 Ssm Telephoto Alpha Camera Lens + Accessory Kit
Customer Ratings: 5 stars
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This lens is AWESOME!!

We are currently using it for action shots (fast moving) in low light and the results have been exceptional!

Would definitely recommend for all Alpha DSLR owners as part of their lens collection.

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