Gadget Deals Of The Day
There are some pretty tempting deals today, such as the Panasonic plasma with a Lumix camera that I was eyeballing. For those looking for laptops, we've got a nice variety today. The rest of you hobos, KY lube and coffee!
There are some pretty tempting deals today, such as the Panasonic plasma with a Lumix camera that I was eyeballing. For those looking for laptops, we've got a nice variety today. The rest of you hobos, KY lube and coffee!
The micro-four-thirds standard created by Panasonic, Olympus and Leica has intrigued us but its mightiest product to date, the Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH1, leaves us scratching our heads.
Nikon and Canon—eternally locked in battle—do each other good by keeping product quality neck and neck. But in the newest entry-level DSLR shootout, if there has to be a winner, it's Canon's Rebel T1i.
Hopefully things are cloudiest before they clear up: Nobody buys real camcorders anymore, entry-level DSLRs are all about HD video, and NYT's David Pogue picks Panasonic's Lumix GH1 as the current 1080p shooting champ.
Both Panasonic and Canon announced their first water- and shock-proof compact toughcams earlier this year, and we've taken them underwater for a test. Which is better for capturing your summertime antics both wet AND wild?
Take a trip to the nerd epicenter of the U.S, to quote Frucci, for only $28 roundtrip today. There you will find Apple brethren, Silicon Valley and be a quick drive away from Snowmodo!
We usually don't dish on Asia-only release dates to preserve your Occidental sanity, but since price and date for the U.S. drop of the new Micro Four Thirds, 1080p-capturing GH1 is still mysterious, let's look.
Canon has an event scheduled for March 25th, and rumor has it that their big announcement will involve a new DSLR in the Rebel line—the EOS 500D.
Digital cameras do more stuff than ever—detect smiles, track specific people, shoot HD video—but while some are adding dials and buttons to manage feature bloat, others are shedding buttons like dead, obsolete skin.
The antidote to Canon's blimpy D10 is Pansonic's comparatively skinny Lumix TS1.