Basics of Digital Camera


Like most things in life when your experiencing something for the first time you are often unsure how to go about it. The same can be true when buying your first digital camera. You will undoubtedly be inundated with facts, figure and more jargon than you know what to do with. We will attempt in this article to help you along with some of the jargon and show you what to look for when buying a digital camera. Some of the feature may not interest you unless you need your camera to perform specific tasks, however its always worth knowing exactly what you are buying so you can pick a good deal when you see one.

Megapixels
The resolution of a camera is measured and advertised in megapixels. The idea behind this figure is the number of pixels that the camera has to take an image with. In this case the higher the number the better quality of picture you will be able to take. For example if you purchase a camera that has a resolution of 4 Megapixels, pictures that you take with that camera will be able to take images made up of 4 million pixels. Its obvious when you think about that a camera with a 2 megapixel resolution will not create as image as crisp or as detailed as the 4 megapixel one.

If you often print out your images on your PC or have them sent away to be printed then the megapixel rating of your camera can be very important to you. Higher megapixels on your camera will allow you to make prints larger in size while still keeping the quality. If you try to print a picture too large than what you camera was designed for then the image drastically loses quality.

The last thing to know about megapixels is the higher the resolution you take pictures in the more space on your memory card will be taken up. A picture taken on a 4 megapixel camera will need twice as much space on a memory card as a picture taken on a 2 megapixel camera. Be sure if you want quality pictures have enough memory on your camera to back it up., Either that or have spare media cards to plug in once your space has been used up.

Digital Zoom and Optical Zoom
No doubt when you are buying a camera you will want some sort of zoom function to take those in the distance shots. This is a troublesome area for some first time buyers. There are two types of zoom on the market for digital cameras. Digital Zoom and Optical Zoom. The only one that really matters is Optical zoom, this is true a true zoom function that brings the objects closer to you using the optics of the camera. Digital Zoom is like using the zoom function on an image editing software package. It enlarges a section of the image so it looks as if its closer to you.

Anything you can do with digital zoom you can do with a photo editing package so don't splash too much money on a camera with digital zoom only. Sometimes you will also so "total zoom" advertised this means the number that is quoted here is the optical zooms magnification added to the digital zooms magnification. Try to find out the magnification level of the optical zoom alone for the true value of the camera.

Aperture Size
We may be going a little further here than some of you would like to care about but bear with us as the aperture size can make a big impact on your pictures. The size of the aperture determines exactly how much light is let into the camera when your picture is taken. Think of the aperture like the iris of your eye. No big deal you may think, however having more light allows you take better pictures in a variety of lighting condition, cloudy days is a perfect example.

With a large enough aperture you would be less likely to need the flash, personally I don't like to use the flash function, the artificial flash of light does not always do justice to the picture you are trying to take. Also effects like red eye are also common.

Shutter Speed
Great effects can be made to images using a variety of shutter speeds. The thing to look for when buying a decent digital camera in terms of shutter speeds is the broadest range you can find. This will give you the best chance of manipulating the picture the way you want it. Combined with a pro-active aperture the shutter speed can make pictures come to life or freeze images in an instant.

This technique is great when you want to take moving objects exactly how they look as if they were still. Setting the shutter speed on a slower setting gives more exposure to the CCD (charge coupled device - the digital equivalent of film). The effect is that the picture almost seems to run. Moving objects are slightly blurred. You may think this is a bad thing but take an example of running water leaving the shutter speed on for longer will soften the image creating a pleasing image to the eye much like the way a waterfall appears in real life.

You can take digital photography to the extreme with a camera that has a very wide range of shutter speeds. With an incredibly slow shutter speed, you can have a long exposure of light to the CCD and hence receive like the famous traffic scenes where the headlights blend into each other into a constant stream.

Storage Media
Digital Cameras come with a slot for a variety of media cards. Check when you buy your camera what type of storage media it requires. There are several popular types including Smart Media, compact flash and XD picture cards. As long as you know what type yours you should be able to safely by the correct type. Always ask at your local store if you are unsure. If you give them your make and model they should be able to point you in the right direction.

The size of the media card you choose depends on your budget but get as much as you can afford. More memory means that you don't have to change media cards, and you will be able to take pictures in the highest quality all the time. You will soon learn the benefits of having plenty storage space when you start to use your camera regularly.

The good thing about cameras media is that it's just like a film if you do run out you can simply insert another one if you have one with you. It can be a bit of a pain when downloading your pictures to your PC but much less more of a pain than having to delete some picture because you have run of space on your media card.

Motorola Defy

While there are many rugged handsets like the Casio G'zOne Ravine and the Sonim XP3 Quest, not many of them are smartphones. In fact, we can only think of one--the Motorola i1, an Android smartphone available from both Boost Mobile and Sprint Nextel. As if sensing a need for such a category, Motorola went ahead and made another rugged smartphone, called the Motorola Defy, and this one is available from T-Mobile. The Defy is not quite as bulky as the i1, but it's built to be almost as tough. If that's not enough, the Defy also has a 5-megapixel camera, an enhanced Motoblur interface, and Wi-Fi calling, and it ships with Android 2.1. 
Design
When compared with the Motorola i1, the Motorola Defy is definitely the sleeker and slimmer model. Measuring 4.2 inches long by 2.3 inches wide by 0.5 inch thick, the Defy has a slim and straightforward touch-screen design, with rounded corners and a rubberized back along with a white hard-plastic border around the battery cover. This black-and-white style makes the Defy look far sportier than the i1's all-black duds.

Yet, the Defy aims to be almost as tough. The display is made out of Corning Gorilla glass, which claims to be resistant to impact and scratches, and the ports are covered in rubberized stoppers to make the phone water-resistant as well. Also all around the phone are screws, presumably to make the phone more secure. It lacks the i1's military certification for salt, fog, humidity, and solar radiation, but the Defy should withstand most everyday bumps and drops just fine, according to Motorola.

On the front is a generous 3.7-inch WVGA display that is spread out from one edge of the phone to the other, leaving little black space around the sides. With its 16 million colors and 480x854-pixel resolution, the screen looks quite stunning. Graphics are saturated with color and crisp with detail. The capacitive display was also very responsive to our taps. There's an internal accelerometer plus a proximity sensor.

The Defy comes with the enhanced version of Motoblur, which lets you move and resize widgets on the home screen. In fact, Motorola requires you to have a Motoblur account in order to use the phone, which we weren't too happy about. The widgets let you keep track of social network updates, incoming messages, and the latest news feeds. You get up to seven different home screens, with shortcuts to the phone dialer, the main menu, and the contacts list on the bottom row. For text input, you can choose from either the standard Android multitouch keyboard or the special Swype keyboard that lets you spell out words by dragging your finger across the keys.

Underneath the display are four touch-sensitive Android hot keys for the pop-up menu, the home screen, Back, and Search. We tend to prefer physical keys here, but we found them to be responsive with a bit of vibration feedback, so it was still easy to navigate.

On the left spine is the Micro-USB charging port, on the top are a 3.5-millimeter headset jack and the screen lock/power key, and on the right is the volume rocker. The camera lens and LED flash are on the back. The battery cover has a lock to protect the phone's internal area from water damage.

Features
Unlike the Motorola i1, the Defy ships with Android 2.1. Though it's not the latest 2.2 update, version 2.1 is still quite good. You get up to seven home screens as we mentioned, live wallpaper, speech-to-text abilities, voice control, the ability to use more than one Gmail account, and more. There's also a universal in-box feature that houses all of your messages and correspondence in a single list. We're also fans of the universal address book, as it syncs with your social network account to bring in your friends' contact information.

The good: The Motorola Defy is tough enough to withstand everyday hazards with its tough Gorilla glass and rugged exterior. Features include a 5-megapixel camera, a music player, Wi-Fi calling, and GPS, and it ships with Android 2.1. Call quality is excellent.

The bad: The Motorola Defy doesn't take very good pictures and its rough-and-tumble aesthetic isn't for everyone. We also wished we didn't have to activate the Motoblur account to use the phone.

The bottom line: The Motorola Defy is a great midtier Android smartphone, especially for those who need a phone to be a little more protected against life's everyday mishaps.

Taken from Nicole lee

8 Steps To Facebook Adventure

Once a social platform for college students, the 40 million active membership site facebook is the latest buzzword in social media marketing. However, most members are extremely online savvy and they smell blatant advertisements from miles away. It is important to know some basics and gain experiences in utilizing the site and interacting with its members before you start planning your facebook marketing adventure.

1. Create a profile. The first step is to create a profile. Sign up using your real name and upload some pictures. If you do not have an email with a top-level edu domain, by default you join a regional network based on your zip code or international address. Later, you have the option to join your company's network and change your regional networks. You can change your networks twice in a 60-day period.

Always upload a profile picture. If you don't upload a picture, facebook places a default question mark icon. It is a good strategy to show your face in facebook. Don't use group pictures for your profile because others may have difficulty identifying you in the group pictures. Don't use logos, your cute cat or dogs' pictures, or a picture of your expensive car and boat.

You don't have to fill all the profile information. Fill only the information you are comfortable sharing with others. If you want to find dates using facebook, fill up the relationship status feature of your profile accordingly. Don't change the status often because others will notice it and doubt your trustworthiness.

2. Make friends. The site can find active facebook friends for you using emails in your address books of a few free web email providers like yahoo, hotmail, gmail, etc. Once you get a few friends, new friend requests will pour in from your friends of friends. You can also search for friends and send requests. Work on creating a network of 100 to 200 friends. Don't make friends with celebrities because in most cases these are fake profiles setup for marketing purposes.

3. Upload pictures and videos. Start uploading some interesting pictures and group them in albums of travel pictures, baby shower photos, bachelor party scenes, etc. Pictures help people connect with your life without meeting you face to face. Always upload a number of related pictures or themes.

Create a random albums and put all your random pictures in the random album. Tag your pictures to identify people on the pictures. When you tag your friends in your pictures, they show up in their wall. You can also share your albums with others outside facebook. You can upload personal videos using your browser or mobile phone and directly record videos to facebook.

4. Use friends' walls and never post on your own wall. You have a wall in facebook for others to write notes. Don't write in your own wall. Write in your friends' walls. Your friends will write notes, share videos or links in your wall. You do the same in your friends' walls. When a friend posts something on your wall, reply to the post. If you find the posting annoying, politely ask them to back off and clean up your wall.

5. Join a few groups. There are all sorts of organic groups in facebook. These are groups of people with similar interests. Find a few that interest you and join them. You can create your own group but first find out if one exists on the same topic. This is an excellent place to be creative and get support from a bunch of people for your cause.

6. Create events and invite people. If you want to host a party, this is the feature you will use. Create your events and invite others to join. You can make an event public for your friends to see or private for the invitees to browse. Under my event, you can browse your friends' public events. You will immediately know who are your fake friends because they did not invite you to their gala dinner they are hosting.

7. Send notes and share links. You send notes to your friends. Depending on the topic, you can send a note to a few friends or to all friends in your network. Don't send chain letter notes because people find these repulsive. Your notes show up in your friends' news feeds or on their walls. A tagged note shows up on the wall, otherwise, it is found in the homepage news feed. Use share for sharing links, even though you can use this feature for sharing notes. Share that link of a cheap travel-booking site you have found while surfing the net with friends planning their upcoming vacations.

8. Visit your homepage everyday. Besides your profile page in facebook, you also have a homepage. You homepage displays collaborative news feeds of all your friends, event and group invitations, friendship requests, friends' birthdays, etc. If you want to know what is going on in your facebook friend circle, visit your homepage everyday.

The other features of facebook are poke, marketplace, facebook mobile, and hundreds of applications that enhance the facebook experience. As the facebook awareness grows, online marketers have started pounding the facebook door to gain a foothold. Future articles will discuss different ways to market your products and services to facebook members without insulting their intelligence.

Best Touch Screen Monitors

For most of us this is a caprice, but for some of the users out there a touch screen monitor is a necessity, or at least an appealing gadget because, let’s face it, sometimes is easier to use your fingers than a keyboard and mouse. In this post I’m going to present you a few touch-screen monitor options you can further check out and buy, plus I’m going to show you how you can convert your regular monitor into a touch-screen one (more info on the bottom of this post).

Acer T230H – 339.99$
The Acer T230H is one of the largest touch screen monitors available right now (23 inch diagonal), featuring multi touch capabilities and complete Windows 7 compatibility, so you don’t have to worry about any kind of software problems. People who bought the Acer T230H say it works perfectly with desktops and laptops and there are no issues with touch recognition in the corners of the screen (like it happens sometimes with touch enabled displays). Let’s see what you get for a little over 300$:
    • 23 inch 1920 x 1080 pixels TN LCD panel
    • 2 ms (Grey-to-Grey) response time
    • height, swivel, tilt adjustments
    • HDMI, DVI-D, VGA ports
    • contrast ratio 80000:1 (dynamic)
    • maximum brightness 300 cd/m2
    • 160 degrees horizontal and vertical viewing angles
    • 35.5 Watt power consumption


Dell SX2210T – 359.96$
This is a smaller diagonal monitor, but with a futuristic design, also multi touch enabled. If you’re into design more than function then you can argue that is worth paying more for a nicer looking monitor like the Dell SX2210T. Specs wise, we have almost the same specs as the Acer T230H, plus a few additions like webcam, 4 USB ports and dual microphones, so the choice in this case is a matter of taste and budget, nothing more. As a matter of geekyness, the Dell SX2210T users optical multi touch, a system where CMOS sensors detect points of touch (you don’t really have to hit the surface of the screen). It’s a new system that works better for multiple points of input.
    • 21.5 inches TN LCD Full HD (1920 x 1080 pixels) display with optical multi touch
    • 2 ms (Grey-to-Grey) response time
    • 83% color gamut
    • tilt adjustment
    • Analog (VGA), DVI-D (HDCP), HDMI ports
    • Multi-Touch (Grab, Rotate, Double –Tap, Zoom In/ Out), Single-Touch (Flick, Scroll, Tap, Drag)
    • Dynamic Contrast Ratio 50000:1 (maximum)
    • brightness 220 cd/m2
    • 160 degrees horizontal and vertical viewing angles
    • 2 megapixel webcam
    • 4 Universal Serial Bus (USB) 2.0 Ports, Security cable lock, Audio In/Out
    • both finger and stylus input are recognized

HP Compaq L2105TM – 256.99$
HP Compaq L2105TM is your typical 22 inch LCD monitor (21.5 inches to be exact) that was fitted with a performance LCD layer, capable of sensing multiple points of contact, allowing you to easily rotate position, shrink and enlarge your documents or navigate media rich 3D content. You can either use your fingers (the screen will get messy in time) or the included stylus. Choice is yours to make. Just like the Dell SX2210T, the HP Compaq L2105TM features optical multi touch technology that detects user interaction via two CMOS sensors placed on the bezel of the display. You just have to get your fingers close enough from the screen and the monitor knows where you’re pointing. This works without actually touching the screen, but you don’t really have to.
    • 21.5″ diagonal LCD TFT Screen with 1920 x 1080 pixels resolution with optical multi touch
    • 5 ms response time
    • 250 cd/m² brightness
    • 1000:1 contrast ratio
    • 170° Horizontal and 160° Vertical viewing angles
    • Analog VGA + DVI-D connectors
    • 35W typical power consumption, <2W standby mode


Planar PX2230MW -427.99$
This is a monitor from a brand that’s not that popular. This doesn’t mean Planar PX2230MW is not worth considering. What we have here is a classic 22 inch Full HD monitor with integrated speakers and multi touch support out of the box. It’s interesting to note that the stand of the monitor is made from two pieces, so we some kind of tripod mount. The only adjustment option for Planar PX2230MW is tilt, but this is hardly an issue.
    • 21.5″ diagonal LCD TFT Screen with Full HD resolution, multi touch enabled
    • 5 ms response time
    • tilt adjustment
    • Analog VGA + DVI-D connectors
    • integrated speakers 2 x 1 Watt
    • 1000:1 contrast ratio
    • 300 cd/m² brightness
    • less than 48 Watts power consumption
    • 170° Horizontal and 160° Vertical viewing angles
 
How to convert a regular monitor to a touch screen monitor
Yes, there is also the cheaper option of getting a touch conversion kit for your desktop monitor. It’s cheaper, hassle free to install, but has one drawback: the WinTouch  Touch Screen Kit is only compatible with up to 18.5 diagonal inch monitors, so this means it’s only an option for older monitors. For 129$, the price you have to pay for WinTouch Touch Screen Kit you get a kit that’s connected via USB 2.0 to any PC and voila, you have a touch monitor. In the kit is an included stylus but WinTouch also recognizes finger inputs. The product is compatible with WIN 7, Vista, Win XP, Win 2000.


Current offer is limited
It’s easy to see that current offer is pretty limited, but there are a few good deals worth considering. If you know of any other touch screen monitor deal let me know so I can update this post.

taken from all touch tablet.com

QuickOffice for Android Honeycomb Tablet

QuickOffice is positioning itself as the go-to option for reading, creating, and editing Office documents on Android. Already available on Android phones, QuickOffice has developed a version of the app optimized for Honeycomb tablets ( Android 3.0 ) that will greatly improve the content creation abilities of the Samsung Galaxy Tab 10.1, Motorola Xoom, and more.

I managed to get a picture of the upcoming app and I have a feeling that QuickOffice will be one of the first downloads for people who expect to use their Honeycomb tablets for document creation or consumption. QuickOffice can use speech-to-text for dictation, import dynamic content, and apply most of the formatting and formulas used in Microsoft Office docs.

The headline feature of QuickOffice, in my opinion, is the cloud support that will be available in the app. Users will be able to open Word, Excel, and PowerPoint documents stored in Dropbox or Google Docs, and then have changes updated to those sites. It’s incredibly useful to be able to have your documents always available, and the mix of local and cloud storage will create plenty of flexibility for QuickOffice features.

A free version of QuickOffice that can view documents is expected to be pre-loaded on upcoming Honeycomb tablets. An upgrade to the premium version, which allows editing, will be available through the Android Market for a yet-to-be-determined price. Here’s a video demonstration of the app