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Take your GoPro camera to the next level

DJI Innovations just released a remote controlled helicopter designed to carry your GoPro video camera into formerly unreachable places. The Phantom Quadcopter is equipped with a mount for your GoPro camera, and allows you to fly up to almost 1,000 feet away! It also sports a GPS system as well as a special ‘safety mode’ that safely lands your ‘copter the moment it flies out of range (or if you fumble and lose control). This bad boy flies at a steady 10 miles/second (horizontally) and can rise and fall at 6 m/s, giving you the capability to scope out your surroundings quickly – and often unnoticed.

Surprisingly, the only downside is NOT the price (the Phantom Quadcopter is under $700!!), but the battery’s life-span….which is around 15 minutes at best. Granted, this is a new product, and I’m certain that they are developing a longer-life battery as we speak.  Heck – if they don’t, they’re seriously shooting themselves in the foot, as the price for the Quadcopter is perfect for anybody’s wallet, not to mention it’s control is smooth and accurate. The Phantom Quadcopter can turn on a dime (that’s airborne of course) and responds to the remote control instantly with no lag between commands and direction changes. Soon we’ll be seeing the Quadcopter as a staple in many movie production studios as it’s control is superb and it’s cost is so low. If you’re interested in getting your hands on one, contact our sales staff – as the Phantom Quadcopter is on it’s way to our store now! Just be sure to order an extra battery for it…until they make a better one.

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Nikon Coolpix A: the Next Best Thing

Nikon just released it’s new point-and-shoot flagship, the Coolpix A. While it is technically just a point-and-shoot camera, it seems a little unfair to call it that, as it has an APS-C sensor – just like the Nikon DX series DSLRs. This little guy packs quite a punch, especially in low light – the active D-lighting alone may top my D7000′s capability in shadow details and noise reduction. This is possible because it was designed without a low-pass filter, just like the D7100. The advantage of not having a low-pass filter is the camera retains much greater detail throughout the entire image (with one less filter for light to pass through, your image is much sharper/has greater clarity). That also explains how the Coolpix A has less grain than my D7000 at higher ISO settings.

The camera itself is small but rugged. Not heavy, just rugged – and it still fits in your shirt pocket. It has a fixed wide angle lens (18.5mm) and DSLR like control over settings such as color parameters, impressive active D-lighting (as I mentioned before), manual focus option on the lens – making it feel more like a ‘real camera’, and there’s a hot shoe for your Nikon speedlights. Heck, my Nissin flash works like a champ on it. The menu system is easy to navigate and the auto-focus is smooth and fast. My only beef with the Coolpix A is the macro lens can stand to be a little better, both in focus speed and proximity. In fact, it seems that Canon’s had Nikon beat on their macro focus in point-and-shoots for some time, but that’s the only place they outshine Coolpix. Other than that, the Coolpix A makes the Canon Powershot G1X and G15 look bulky and slow, both in form and low-light functionality.

Fuji’s new X100s just hit the market a couple weeks ago and has been all the rage with pros and enthusiasts alike, but the Coolpix A just may take the cake. Not only does it beat Canon’s best Powershots in size, it’s sleeker than the Fuji, too. It’s a better size and has a better price tag than the X100s…$200 cheaper, mind you. Both cameras are great at higher ISO’s, but the X100s just doesn’t stand a chance when it comes to the intuitive controls of the Coolpix A.

Not at all an unfair comparison, as they both have similar sensors and are seeking to reel in the same demographic. You are, after all, the final judge as to what camera is the best. You are the demographic that both companies wish to please, and luckily we have both cameras in stock here at our store, so drop by and get your hands on one. We hope to see you soon, so until then:  Happy Hunting!

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The Samsung NX1000 – Big Punch in a Little Package

The Samsung NX1000 Camera just may give Sony and Nikon a run for their money. It may not be groundbreaking in it’s design, as we’ve had Sony’s much celebrated NEX series of mirrorless cameras on the market for a couple years now, not to mention Nikon’s triumphant follow-up, the Nikon 1 series, the J1 and V1 (and now the J2 and J3)….BUT what the Samsung NX1000 does offer just may overtake the mirrorless camera market. In this article, I’ll review the Samsung NX1000 so you can decide if this is the camera for you.

Read More Here…

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Canon Unveils the Canon Powershot N – A Review

, Canon unveils the new Canon PowerShot N Digital Camera - a totally new type of camera that offers a different shape when capturing spontaneous photos and sharing them instantly with social networks. It’s tiny…unconventionally tiny. And Canon is pitching it as the perfect smartphone companion, with it’s super intuitive Wi-Fi connectivity, allowing higher-quality, artistic images and Full HD videos to be shared in near real-time. So…will Canon be the first to replace  iPhone cameras ? Is that their goal for the Powershot N, or is it just a companion to our Smart Phones? If anyone thinks they can replace the Smart Phone camera, Canon is the company with the skills and resources to back up this new venture in digital photography.  But in the end, it’s the Consumer’s choice, so read on and decide….
Read More Here…

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Field Review for the Sony RX100 Compact Camera

Author’s Note: If you’ve read one of my reviews, you know how I approach the reviews. If you haven’t, I’ll go ahead and let you know that this is a practical field impression review. There are plenty of dependable resources online like Dpreview.com and the DxOMark.com that are much better equipped for full technical reviews. I do not have the equipment or the time to do full technical rundowns on each camera we receive, so I leave that sort of work to the professionals. However, I take these cameras out into the field, use them for my personal style of shooting and then relay those experiences here in these reviews. While it is great knowing all of the technical qualities of a camera and it’s capabilities, if I don’t like the way it responds in the field then it’s essentially worthless to me. I think this is how a lot of photographers feel too, so that is why I write these kinds of reviews for your perusal. Enjoy.

I am not a point and shoot camera user. I would rather break my back with a big SLR on a day out instead of sacrificing quality and control for a simple pocketable point and shoot. Not that they don’t have their place, that is just the way I shoot. I like my optical viewfinders and my manual focus with real mechanical feedback. That being said, I can actually see myself using the Sony RX100 compact camera often. I really liked the portability, and I did not have to sacrifice image quality for it. I have full manual capability the entire time with brilliant control schemes that are as intuitive as they are useful. Read More Here…

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