Features

Ten Quality Cameras You Can Afford

Want good-looking pictures without breaking the bank? We put the latest crop of digicams under $150 to the test.


By Anthony Losanno
05/15/2007
 
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A few years ago, we wouldn't have been able to round up 3.2-megapixel cameras under $250. Today, it's possible to pick up a 5-, 6-, or 7-MP shooter for less than $150. Don't think that these point-and-shoots are clunky plastic boxes, either. They each use two AA batteries and look similar, but they also have LCDs larger than two inches (with some as big as 2.5 inches), at least a 3X optical zoom, the ability to capture video, and a handful of scene modes.
 
We tested these ten models by shooting both indoors and outdoors, as well as by recording video clips. Several of these budget digicams take frame-worthy photos, but only a few of them combine good-looking pictures with ease of use and sleek design. Check out our photo-quality comparison gallery to see which cameras captured the sharpest images.
 
  1. Canon PowerShot A460

  2. Fujifilm Finepix A610

  3. HP Photosmart M537

  4. Kodak EasyShare C653

  5. Nikon Coolpix L11

  6. Olympus FE-210

  7. Panasonic Lumix DMC-LS70S

  8. Pentax Optio E30

  9. Samsung Digimax S500

  10. Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S650

Photo-Quality Comparison Gallery (Compare photos taken by all ten cameras side-by-side.)
 

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