by the_camera_poser » Thu 17 Jul, 2008 9:12 pm
Sorry it's taken me a bit to respond- I've been offline due to moving to Tasmania!
If you're still in the market, I'd make one STRONG suggestion. Make sure that your digicam has a truely wide wide-angle range. A lot of digicams only go to the equivalent of 38mm on a 35mm camera, which is not wide-angle at all. For this big vistas and for shots with a lot of foreground and distance, you're going to want a digicam that gives you 28mm or 24mm equivalence.
Also, remember, digital zoom is really a lot of hype, atleast in my understanding. All it does is crop the centre of an image at the maximum optical zoom range of the camera, which doesn't give you the same effect as optical zoom. In otherwords, an 8mp camera with a 2x digital zoom is producing 4mp images at it's longest focal length.
furthermore, there's two more things i'd keep in mind. #1, more MP s not necessarily better- my understanding is that image quality for digicams pretty much maxs out at 7mp. After thas, noise (equivalent of grain in the film days) can hamper the shot. Some of the really top cameras like Canon's G9 don't have as big a problem with this as others, but it still deosn't have as good an image as the G7, which had only 7 or 8 MP from memory. I'd steer way away from 10 or 12 MP digicams, unless you check out their reviews closely, particularly paying attention to their performance in noise.
The second is that Image Stabilization absolutely rocks! If you must compromise on anything in buying a camera, don't compromise on this. Your shots will be WAY better with it. Also, try and get optical image stabilization, which occurs in the lens itself, as opposed to digital, which is IMHO far less effective.
I'll avoid recommending Olympus, which I've had problems with, and Fuji- which is a very popular range but that I've had real troubles with.
NOW, I am a Canon-groupie, unlike some of my sadly mislead Nikon or Pentax users on this board (I respect them, but in a snotty, condescending way LOL). So, the first camera, which comes in under your budget is the Canon IXUS 860 IS- it has a wide focal length of 28mm, 8 mp, and optical IS. Good stuff.
I don't know anything about the image quality from it, but the new Pentax W60 waterproof camera sounds cool, but you'll be paying for waterproofing, which you reckon you don't need.
Canon Powershot SX100 IS- only like $290 online. I don't know what the wide-angle of it is. lots of good features and it has 10x optical zoom.
Canon A590 IS, only like $189, and you can get a wide-angle lens for it.
The Panasonic Lumix DMC LZ10 would be my personal choice under $400. It has all the features that the Canons have, but I'm pretty sure it also has a 16:9 format, which makes for a panoramic-like photo, that looks great on widescreen monitors and TV's. You can crop other pictures for this effect, but you lose image quality when you do it.
But if I was you, I'd go that extra bit more (one usually does when camera shopping), and buy the new DMZ TZ11. This baby is sexy! I know this has 16:9 ratio, and a host of other goodies. This is one sweet camera. 8mp, 28mm leica lens, 10x optical zoom, optical and digital image stablization, and a high-speed burst mode. Austin Powers says "Yeah Baby yeah!" (Ok, so I want one of these)
BUT, after all is said and done, if you are going to print out at 8x10 or less, you're not looking for manual controls, the Panasonic DMC FS3, or even a Canon 740, would do you just fine. It's really easy to get sucked in to the "need more" game with cameras.
My wife is a former photo-journalist, and her best pictures have been with a $100 Canon 35mm point-and-shoot. She gets lots of good photos with the professional gear, but the point-and-shoot was in the right place at the rigt time with the right responsiveness. A lot of pros well tell you the same thing.
Hope that all helped. i'm sure Nikon makes a good camera too. (Just kidding- they make good cameras)