polypomo wrote:
我身邊也是很多女生拿...(恕刪)
hi thanks for your opinion as well polupomo,
Panasonic Lumix FZ5 is not a digital SLR ? oh man i thought it was!! my friend said it come with SD memory. he will give it to me as well.
Sorry i really a beginner. DSLR is mean it uses memory card to save photo ?
SLR is those old type which use file to save photos riht?
sorry if i am wrong. thanks again.
bRiCk PhOnE cLuB ----->
http://keee-keee.blogspot.com
配色蠻活潑的,不同於其他的相機包...
版上有很多大大分享過說~~
http://www.mobile01.com/topicdetail.php?f=164&t=125730
keeekeee wrote:polypomo wrote:
我身邊也是很多女生拿...(恕刪)
hi thanks for your opinion as well polupomo,
sorry if i am wrong. thanks again.
ha~ first of all:
SLR - Single Lens Reflective, on these cameras, the image comes through the lens, bounces off a mirror and into a pentaprism (in English...a piece of glass!) and then the image sent into the VFD (View Finder) and eventually into your retna (sp?). When you press the shutter button, the mirror is raised, creating a different light path (not through pentaprism any more!) and this time, the image is sent into the film compartment (in short that is, there are other things the image has to pass through but it's too redundant)
on DSLR's: the film is simply replaced with a CCD sensor (Couple charged device...umm...lets just call it "image capturing thing" for now), so instead of a roll of film, you have the CCD that captures the images and then stores them digitally in a memory medium (SD, CF, xD, MS...etc etc). The rest remain the same, you still have the lens, the mirror and the pentaprism and VFD
Digital Cameras (the dinky consumer cameras), there are no mirror nor pentaprism, instead, the image comes through lens, through shutter and then onto the CCD, the view finder is often just a small glass window located off to the main lens barrel. The same setup is found on prosumer cameras as well.
SLR/DSLR - since you are seeing through the lens, there's little loss in detail and you get an instant view of what you can snap. More often than not, each lens will cost you the equivalent of a consumer digital camera, so you see where the diff in image quality comes from. The CCD or CMOS sensors on DSLR's are much larger than that of consumer digi cams, allowing good ISO perforamnce, better depth of field on the lenses and improved overall image quality
I'll just stop here before i put you to sleep and there are tons of links on the net that'll explain the differences much better
cheers,