cameras

Tech Buyer's Guide: Point-and-Shoot Cameras

In an excerpt from our new Tech Buyer's Guide, learn everything you need to know to get the best point-and-shoot camera for the buck

Popular Science Tech Buyer's Guide Point-and-Shoot Cameras:
Each day this week leading up to Black Friday, we'll excerpt a chunk of our new Tech Buyer's Guide here on the site to arm you with the skills and the picks to get the most from your weekend shopping madness. Here are our picks for point-and-shoot cameras and our buying advice for digital cameras in general. Check out the guide for our picks in DSLR and Micro 4/3 cameras, as well as 15 other product categories.

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Olympus Updates PEN with EP-2, Still Chases Panasonic


Olympus today continued the game of cat-and-mouse that is the land of Micro Four Thirds cameras with their new PEN EP-2. The new shooter, which comes on the half-iversary of the EP-1, is chasing Panasonic's much-lauded GF1 but feels unlikely to overtake it.

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Why Astrophotography Is Worth the Trouble

(And the at-times-disappointing results)

Mixed Results: My first attempt at Jupiter [left] demonstrates why it's a tricky first target--the brightness of the planet against the darkness of space casts a wide dynamic range for the novice to capture. But it's possible, as a photo taken with the same camera provided by the SBIG folks shows [right].  Eric Adams/SBIG
Astrophotography is hard. Astronomically hard. Everything has to be perfect. Your telescope, with camera attached, must track your target in precise synchronization with the rotation of the Earth. It can't shake. It can't even vibrate. You have to nail your camera's exposure settings or you'll be rewarded with an incoherent mess. Your targets are often so dim you can't even see them until after the image has been made, so focusing is a nightmare.

So why try? Because it makes the entities floating in the vastness of the universe much more real than any Hubble wallpaper on your computer desktop can.

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Canon 1D Mark IV Joins the Nigh-Vision Club, This Time With Full HD Video


Less than a week after Nikon wowed with its D3S, with previously unseen light sensitivity up to ISO 102,400, Canon has unveiled their own night-vision pro DSLR, the 1D Mark IV. But where the D3S falls short in the video department, the 1D Mark IV pushes things forward.

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Nikon's D3S Claims to See in the Dark, But Still Can't Shoot 1080p Video


Night vision, you say? The Nikon D3S, which the company unmasked today, is a pro-level D-SLR built around an entirely new 12-megapixel CMOS sensor that allegedly works well past twilight.

The D3S's sensor has expanded ISO sensitivity up to 102,400 (that's quadruple that of its older sibling, the Nikon D3), which means seriously low-light shooting. In fact, Nikon claims ISO 102.4K can pick up details you'd miss with the naked eye. (Too bad it can't see through walls, though.)

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UK Citizens Can Catch Crimes on Closed-Circuit Cameras for Cash


Starting next month, British citizens will be given the chance to watch a number of the country's closed-circuit security cameras in hopes of catching a crime and winning up to £1,000 as a reward. The "game," run by the website InternetEyes.co.uk, lets participants log in online, alerting officials in real time via SMS and/or email.

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Creators of CCDs and Fiber Optics Win 2009 Nobel Prize In Physics


We live in a world designed by Charles K. Kao, Willard S. Boyle, and George E. Smith. Their work on the physics of light made possible the fiber optic cables carrying this web page to your phone, and the digital camera on the other side. And on December 10th, King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden will award them the Nobel Prize in physics for their work.

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How to Give Your Car Its Very Own $300 Google Street View Photo Rig


Google is reported to have spent millions of dollars on its Street View project. Roy Ragsdale, a student at West Point, has done a pretty nice job of putting together a portable panorama camera setup that includes GPS and Google Earth file output for under $300, using exclusively open source tools.

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The Goods

MegaGoods 2009: The Year's Hottest Products in One Place


MegaGoods 2009:
In every issue we select a dozen or so gadgets that embody what PopSci is all about--taking innovation a step further. But it's not just innovation for innovation's sake; The Goods is made up of the gear that's doing things no one's ever done before while still managing to be available now.

Here, we've rounded up the entire year's worth of the Goods, all in one place.

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How To Take Photos From the Edge of Space For $150

MIT students build a high-altitude, photo-snapping balloon using off-the-shelf components

Icarus Touches the Edge: A $150 view of space  1337arts
Scientists and students alike have previously launched low-budget balloons that rise to the upper reaches of Earth's atmosphere, snapping unbelievable photos from near-space. But MIT's Icarus team managed the same feat using only off-the-shelf items, and for a measly cost of $150. Here's how they did it.

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December 2009: Best of What's New

In our December issue, Popular Science names the 100 best innovations of the year: bombproof wallpaper, self-parking cars, the fastest helicopter, and 97 more. Plus inventor profiles and videos.

Check out the best of what's new here.

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