| I haven't looked at smaller cameras in a while, so I'm not sure what's hot these days.
The nice thing about Canons is that they actually make their own sensors, where most other digital cameras use sensors made by Sony. The nice thing about this is that the sensor is made for the camera and so the quality is nicer, aspect ratio is more accurate. By using Sony sensors in other brands, Sony is forced to make a ... good quality but generic sensor to get the most out of most cameras. If that makes any sense.
Nikon (the brand to use for high quality film cameras) is right up there with Canon these days. When I bought my XTi last year, Lars took ownership of the Nikon CoolPix that I had been using. It's a fairly decent little camera. You can get great 4x6 and 5x7 prints in pretty nice quality, and if the image clarity is sharp, a fairly decent 8x10 if you really want. That camera is a couple of years old now, though. It was $300 new, and I'm sure with technology advancing as fast as it has been the last couple of years, the price has gone down and the quality has gone up.
Salespeople will really push the megapixel size... This camera is so much better than that one because you can shoot at 12 MP instead of 10! WooT! Not really. Pay more attention to the optical zoom versus the digital zoom. You'll get better clarity out of a longer optical zoom, and most photo editing programs can enlarge much better than the digital zoom on the cameras. I'd also pay attention to the kind of data storage it uses (compact flash card, etc.), the type of battery it uses (more as a general expense thing than anything).
I know, not very specific, Lars is much more in to the details than I am. But I'd stick with Canon or Nikon for the brand. They're the front-runners right now as far as image quality and mechanical superiority goes. |