On Mon, 17 Nov 2008, Peter Alefounder wrote:
> 2. At least 10 megapixels.
It seems this is not necessarily a good thing.
There is a tradeoff between number of pixels and the size of the pixel 
on the the detector. As the pixel falls below around 350um across, the 
noise increases and image quality degrades. 10M or so should be fine on 
a digital SLR, but on a compact you're actually better off nearer 3M to 
5M pixels ... if you can still find one. It seems the demand for more 
pixels has resulted in a recent and marked degradation in performance.
Unfortunately I can't remember where I saw this report, but it's on the 
'Net somewhere. Probably worth a search on some logical keywords to see 
if you can find it.
FWIW, I'm a huge fan of Olympus. They're great cameras, mount as USB 
mass storage and have always been very reliable.
I chose a 3M pixel camera with a 10:1 zoom as a better compromise than 
the then 5M + 3:1 alternative.
One other thing of note .. with compacts, think carefully about a 
viewfinder. My wife's camera doesn't have one and using the camera in 
bright sun is a bit hit-and-miss and/or hits the batteries quite hard 
driving the big display anythink like brightly enough. Mine has an 
electronic viewfinder on which the resolution is low but normally 
adequate when on autofocus, giving an SLR-type behaviour in a compact 
camera.
ATB,
    Gordon.
-- 
Gordon Scott                  http://www.gscott.co.uk
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