30 Second Smile As Seen On TV | Try FREE 60 Days – health1store.com

60 Second Smile

30 Second Smile As Seen On TV | Try FREE 60 Days – health1store.com

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60 second smile Video Rating: 0 / 5

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Video Rating: 0 / 5

The Ultimate Interview Day 1

This experience is back in 2007 where I was almost graduated from my engineering degrees, no notting about the coperate world. Here they come the most high paying jobs in the world to offer in my Universities.

The interview was planned for 3 days with 3 rounds of elimination to find the best apple in the Universities. There are about 1000 applicants grabbing for the 200 applications forms available. The first day was a simple fill up the forms and an short 5 mins interview to shortlist 40 candidates out of the 200 applications.. what a 20% chance to proceed for the second day.

After fill up the forms, all of us were nervously waiting for our turns to “sell” oursleves in 5 mins or you are out of the game…. everybody was guessing what kind of question will be ask, some quickly review study notes, some review about the company and some was praying hard….

All of a sudden, its my turn now…. my number was called and called… I softly and nervously responded to the beautifull lady, yes I am. She asked me to go to counter #2.. I get to counter # 2 and found a man about 40 years, He gave me a warm smile and invited me for a sit. Did not waste much time, he instructed me to pick a paper containing question to be ask… my hand is shaking while picking up the question… and i was praying to let me get an wasy question…aha…” Tell me about the books you had read”…. The man ask me to read out the question and say go ahead.

I read the question and he just sat there silently without a word… suddenly I am totally blind.. I sat there for 2 mins without a word… and he look at the stop watch indicating time is passing by…. opps… I have 3 mins more .. but i read hundred of book.. which book i am going to tell… my hand is sweating… argh… i start to speak softly….

Err.. I read an engineering books and start to pour out all my engineering knowledge, equations and bla bla bla… He knock on the table indicating time is pass.. Oh.. NO… I lossed 2 mins before… for sure i wil not get the jobs.. I din’t stop and keep speaking pass the 5 mins… He smiled again to ask me to stop … ..Arhg!… This time i got to stop.. but all hope was lost.. i was blaming myself how stupid I am to wasted 2 mins sitting there silenly without “hard selling” my self…

I went out looks pale and still nervous from the interview, … all others applicants was curious what is they asking a word but i speak a word and sit there silently for half an hour to clam down myself… Here come the secretary lady… She intructed all of the to come back the next day 8am sharp for the results. The shortlisted candidates list will be posted on the information board and continue on the second day.

I was nervous and worried the whole night, gussing on the results on tomorrow.. I never have such tremendous pressure in my life.. I loss my dreams jobs because of my nervous and stupidity even before i graduated… what a kind of nerd… I start to pray hard to be shortliested tomorrow until morning…..

60 second smile question by ๓єow: How come when I smile even when Im not happy, I instantly feel happier?
Try it! Seriously. Just start smiling right now, hold it for 60 seconds.
And tell me you dont feel happier. It may not work for everyone
but it gives truth to the saying “fake it till you make it”. LoL
Silly but True. : ) Smile :)

60 second smile best answer:

Answer by froufrou
;-)

it fools the brain into beleiving it is happy, its contagious, like when soemone else laughs you usually do too, you can laugh at your own laughing, so if you can do that, then you can probably also smile and make yourself think your genunily happy

Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-W530 14.1 MP Digital Still Camera with Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 4x Wide-Angle Optical Zoom Lens and 2.7-inch LCD (Silver)

60 second smile – click on the image below for more information.

  • 26mm wide lens with 4x optical zoom
  • Capture breathtaking images in Sweep Panorama Mode
  • SteadyShot image stabilization reduces blur
  • iAuto mode automatically optimizes camera settings
  • Face Detection and Smile Shutter technologies

60 second smile

Combining a variety of intelligent, easy-to-use features, the Sony W530 DSCW530 Cyber-Shot Digital Camera makes it a breeze to shoot life as it happens. Capture landscapes with one touch using Sweep Panorama Mode and snap that perfect portrait with Smile Shutter™ technology. Powerful and pocket-sized, the Sony W530 DSCW530 Cyber-Shot Digital Camera also features 14.1 megapixels and a 26mm wide angle lens with 4x optical zoom. In addition to SteadyShot™ image stabilization which compensates f


Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-W530 14.1 MP Digital Still Camera with Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 4x Wide-Angle Optical Zoom Lens and 2.7-inch LCD (Silver)

Click on the button for more 60 second smile information and reviews.

OLD:

Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-W530 14.1 MP Digital Still Camera with Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 4x Wide-Angle Optical Zoom Lens and 2.7-inch LCD (Silver)

  • 26mm wide lens with 4x optical zoom
  • Capture breathtaking images in Sweep Panorama Mode
  • SteadyShot image stabilization reduces blur
  • iAuto mode automatically optimizes camera settings
  • Face Detection and Smile Shutter technologies

Combining a variety of intelligent, easy-to-use features, the Sony W530 DSCW530 Cyber-Shot Digital Camera makes it a breeze to shoot life as it happens. Capture landscapes with one touch using Sweep Panorama Mode and snap that perfect portrait with Smile Shutter™ technology. Powerful and pocket-sized, the Sony W530 DSCW530 Cyber-Shot Digital Camera also features 14.1 megapixels and a 26mm wide angle lens with 4x optical zoom. In addition to SteadyShot™ image stabilization which compensates f

List Price: $ 119.00

Price:

Customer Reviews


58 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
The perfect balance of beauty, affordability and usability, April 26, 2011
By 
Andrew Siew (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) – See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)
  
(REAL NAME)
  

This review is from: Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-W530 14.1 MP Digital Still Camera with Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 4x Wide-Angle Optical Zoom Lens and 2.7-inch LCD (Silver) (Electronics)

With the prices of DSLRs and mirrorless compacts edging closer toward the 400 dollar mark, the market for compact digital cameras is not as profitable as it once was. Manufacturers struggle to find every possible way to reduce production cost to bring the retail prices of these little imagers as low as possible while maintaining their usability as an actual digital camera.

It would have been impossible to imagine a model like the DSC-W530, having a 14.1 sensor, usable high ISO sensitivities, 4x optical zoom with Carl-Zeiss optics to sell for anything less than 400 dollars just 5 years ago.

With compact digital cameras becoming obsolete as soon as they are released, Sony has attempted once again to maintain its position as a serious point-and-shoot maker since their Mavica days.

The W530, along with all of Sony’s most recent W series, stands somewhere between Sony’s entry level models and their somewhat advanced but expensive “luxury” models. Under the current W series line-up, Sony has the W510, W520, W530, W550, W570, WX5 and WX7.

For the past few years, Sony has been creating one ultimate point-and-shoot for each one of their W, HX and T series, stripping away certain premium features as they go down the price tags to finally arrive at some insanely cheap model made out of painted plastic for each one of those series.

So for the price of just over 100 dollars, Sony was able to retain some of the more important features from their most expensive W model, the WX7 on the DSC-W530, and they are:

1) Usable high ISO sensitivities at 1600 and 3200. Colors look a bit flat and the images look processed at these settings, but at least the images are usable for smaller prints (at a pinch, up to around A4(8R) sizes). Please bear in mind that this is after all a point-and-shoot and not a mirrorless or DSLR with APS-C sized sensors, so I’m applying a very different standard here when rating the high ISO output of this camera.

2) Useful, good quality 4X Carl Zeiss optics and fast focus lock.

3) Outdoor daylight scenes from ISO 80 to 800 are simply breathtaking, with sharp edges, deep depth-of-field (DOF), strong contrast and saturated colors, making this a great group picture camera (think family portraits at picnics etc). Although dynamic range (the total number of levels that can be captured from the darkest point to the brightest point of an image, without details getting clipped) is very limited. So beware of backlit scenes, and always point the camera in the same direction as the sun (the sun must be behind you) so your subjects are lit up as brightly as the background.

4) Very elegant semi-metal chassis with brushed aluminum on the front.

5) Extremely thin profile with the extra small battery, weightlessness: this camera will most likely be able to sneak into a concert without you having to convince the bouncers that you are carrying a bar of soap in your pocket.

6) Generously sized 2.7″ LCD screen with plenty of light under room lighting, just barely viewable under very bright sunlight.

7) VGA video recording with sound and Sweep Panorama.

8) Uses both Sony Memory Stick and the very afforadable SD cards (Up to SDXC), although this feature is nothing new but it’s worth mentioning.

However, the wafer-thin battery has very limited operation charge capacity, and the camera seems to be missing a few traditional controls such as creative mode selection (color, b&w, sepia, etc) and a “mode” dial to give you direct access to preset photographic parameters. Some basic manual controls (like those found on the W300) over the camera’s shutter speed and aperture were of course also missing, and due to the size of the camera, it is being operated and controlled by only a handful of buttons.

And here’s a list of things that I did not like about this camera:

1) A Sony processor instead of a Bionz processor, although I personally do not think the Bionz processor is that great other than providing faster image processing. The Sony image processor for the W530 seems to be providing the same quality of reduction for high ISO shots as Sony’s Bionz processor.

2) No sports mode (may also explain the slower than average maximum shutter speed of just 1/1500 sec). Difficult to freeze moving objects when needed.

3) No USB charging (Sony never had them though).

4) Super slow continuous burst. At 1 frame per second, Sony might as well remove this feature altogether.

5) No zooming during movie recording.

But other than the few gripes above, I find myself enjoying the use of this camera completely. The camera is small, very light and looks really good up close and shoots half decent pictures under most conditions. The W530 also comes with a USB / Video connector (the video…

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114 of 124 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Review by actual owner – great little snapshot camera, April 19, 2011
By 

I was able to get this model a little early, and was excited to try it out in – what better city to test a camera? – Paris. The last Sony snapshot camera I used was on a trip in 2007, and I was so dissatisfied with that camera that I sold it immediately after returning home. I was eager to see if Sony had improved their entry level cameras, especially the picture quality. I shall post some pictures to offer examples up in the product details, but these will be reduced in size for posting.

Photo quality: My initial day out indicated that they have made dramatic improvements in both quality and speed. Photos in daylight were crisp and clear in just about every shot, and any that weren’t were only because I was shooting poorly on purpose to test the photos. I was also quite happy with the quality of shots in low light and indoors, which is where I noticed the most improvement over past Sony low-end offerings. There was some blurring in darker situations, of course, but for the most part the software was able to produce images that are well balanced and low grain. The 14 megapixel feature is great – there are many photos I’ve been able to crop and retain quality, and photos of, say, a stone sarcophagus can be zoomed in upon when viewing images later to see very good detail.

I must also mention that the camera is very good at balancing photos. It almost always produces a picture with an appropriate contrast, and only in the worst cases did the image wash out in an area. For example, a shot of Joan of Arc (the statue, not the person) in Notre Dame came out very well even with a stained glass window in the background. The stained glass was bright but distinguishable, and the detail of the stone statue was clear and well balanced. Only in extreme cases – such as a shot of a black sculpture in the Louvre with a window behind it with blaring sunlight – did the camera fail to balance the image, but these are the kind of bad photography shots one would never expect a camera to take well.

Types of Photos: Like most all snapshot photos, this camera will perform best shooting still subjects with plenty of light. Moving objects didn’t tend to blur, a problem I’d had with other cheap snapshot cameras, but the response time can make getting these shots difficult. Trying to capture a motorcycle passing an old church, my 7-10 attempts were mostly good photos, but getting the moving bike in the exact spot I wanted was nearly impossible.

Features: Overall, this camera lacks in features, although for most uses I found it sufficient, and at the price I didn’t expect a lot of extras. The 4x zoom is relatively fast and easy to use, and about right for this type of camera. I was surprised there was no optical zoom given the high megapixels, but I can live with cropping on the computer. The panorama mode is nifty but not that useful – it works quite well in creating a long image, which of course will cause distortion in most cases. To use this feature, you set the mode and clich the shutter. The camera will prompt you to move it from left to right, and then it will generate the image (which is always impossible to see on the display owing to its shape.) Here I would have liked some add’l features – there is just ‘one size’ for panorama shots – you must sweep all the way across or the image will fail. This creates many shots that will need to be messed with on the computer later, which is okay but annoying. I was also disappointed panorama doesn’t work in an up and down orientation – you always have to sweep the camera in the same manner. You can, of course, hold it sideways to create a vertical panorama, but I really wanted some vertical shots tqking advantage of a larger width. Still, panoramas of the Tour Eiffel allowed me to create some fun, unique shots of the full height of the structure. There are not many other features – just some rudimentary quality settings, face detection, etc. Some might want to move up to a camera with more features, but I actually appreciated this in a point and shoot camera.

Battery life: Here the camera could use some help. Perhaps I’m spoiled by my Apple products, but digital cameras have more or less remained stuck in 2002 concerning batteries. It’s annoying to have a separate charger, and battery life isn’t great. Three hours of shooting…granted, constant shooting…at St Denis drained it. Given how light and small it is, I’d fully support doubling the battery size to get twice the life. I’d also love for camera makers to start to move toward USB charging options.

I’d also love it if cameras would start incorporating some onboard space. It feels like the dark ages to have to buy a card. 2 – 4 gig of onboard memory with a card slot for expansion would be nice.

Overall, a great, small, fun camera that’s easy to grab and go. I wish Sony would re-imagine some of the ways digital cameras work, perhaps taking…

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25 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great camera for the price, July 4, 2011
Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)

The intelligent shooting mode is great–it detects different scene types (landscape, sunny, cloudy, etc.) and auto-adjusts the exposure settings to get the best picture. Picture quality is great. It also has a movie mode that takes nice videos. The mic for the audio is a little weak but it is only a point and shoot camera, so a so-so mic is to be expected. The panorama mode is very easy to use–just point and sweep while holding the shutter–and the camera automatically stitches everything together with no overlap or missed sections. I’ve used panorama mode at a baseball stadium and at a lake and got great detail in both settings.

The battery life could be a bit better, but it lasts for at least 8 hours of shooting. I was turning the camera off and on a lot, which had a bigger drain on the battery, I’m sure.

I first used a SanDisk 4GB Memory Stick Pro Duo with this camera, and the camera would not read the card properly. I even reformatted the memory card with my computer and the camera still would not read the card. I finally purchased a SanDisk SDHC memory card that works fine. Others have had problems too with the SanDisk Memory Stick Pro Duo, so be careful with that.

Pros- Intelligent mode for automatically adjusting the settings; picture quality; movie mode and panorama mode; good quality for the price.

Cons- Rechargeable battery could last a bit longer; Battery is specific Sony battery that can only be charged from a wall outlet with the included charging doc; Mic is a bit weak for audio when shooting movies.

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6 Responses to “30 Second Smile As Seen On TV | Try FREE 60 Days – health1store.com”

  1. Eyes Wide Open says:

    Emotions are connected to physiology. Antonio Damasio, a respected neuroscientist, proposed the “somatic marker hypothesis,” which states that certain emotional states, like sadness, guilt, fear, anger, or joy, are bundles of innate bodily responses. Meaning that we don’t feel emotions in an abstract, disembodied way, but that each distinct emotion has its own physical manifestation. Because of this link, behaviors that imitate emotional states invariably activate the associated emotional circuitry in the brain. Actors do it all the time.

  2. Enzo Matrix says:

    the act of smiling actually releases endorphines in your brain to make you happier. the same stuff that prozac releases and many other drugs….dopemine. so smile more, you will be happier :)

  3. Happy Day Otter says:

    The brain and the body are connected, the mind and the brain are connected.
    Happiness and other emotional states can be affected by how the body is, and what it is doing.
    You have found one part of this key. Smiling can induce happiness in someone who does not have super reasons to be sad. And attitude change can take place anytime, and can be accepted or rejected.
    Diet, exercise or the lack can change mental states as much as drugs (prescription or recreational) can.

    And the attitudes that you take can help or hurt your body. People can die of grief related stuff, even beyond their attitude of not caring to take care of themselves.

    Meditation can help, understanding stress relief can help, being with people you like can help, and the lack or the reverse of these can hurt.

    This idea/discovery is the basis for Hatha yoga, which in turn is the basis for the rest of the Yogas.

    http://www.whale.to/b/scripts.html

  4. honeycomb says:

    a pharma company is actually drawing that cell from human subjects and they want to sell it as a happy drug.

  5. Andrew Siew says:
    58 of 60 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    The perfect balance of beauty, affordability and usability, April 26, 2011
    By 
    Andrew Siew (Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia) –
    (VINE VOICE)
      
    (REAL NAME)
      

    This review is from: Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-W530 14.1 MP Digital Still Camera with Carl Zeiss Vario-Tessar 4x Wide-Angle Optical Zoom Lens and 2.7-inch LCD (Silver) (Electronics)

    With the prices of DSLRs and mirrorless compacts edging closer toward the 400 dollar mark, the market for compact digital cameras is not as profitable as it once was. Manufacturers struggle to find every possible way to reduce production cost to bring the retail prices of these little imagers as low as possible while maintaining their usability as an actual digital camera.

    It would have been impossible to imagine a model like the DSC-W530, having a 14.1 sensor, usable high ISO sensitivities, 4x optical zoom with Carl-Zeiss optics to sell for anything less than 400 dollars just 5 years ago.

    With compact digital cameras becoming obsolete as soon as they are released, Sony has attempted once again to maintain its position as a serious point-and-shoot maker since their Mavica days.

    The W530, along with all of Sony’s most recent W series, stands somewhere between Sony’s entry level models and their somewhat advanced but expensive “luxury” models. Under the current W series line-up, Sony has the W510, W520, W530, W550, W570, WX5 and WX7.

    For the past few years, Sony has been creating one ultimate point-and-shoot for each one of their W, HX and T series, stripping away certain premium features as they go down the price tags to finally arrive at some insanely cheap model made out of painted plastic for each one of those series.

    So for the price of just over 100 dollars, Sony was able to retain some of the more important features from their most expensive W model, the WX7 on the DSC-W530, and they are:

    1) Usable high ISO sensitivities at 1600 and 3200. Colors look a bit flat and the images look processed at these settings, but at least the images are usable for smaller prints (at a pinch, up to around A4(8R) sizes). Please bear in mind that this is after all a point-and-shoot and not a mirrorless or DSLR with APS-C sized sensors, so I’m applying a very different standard here when rating the high ISO output of this camera.

    2) Useful, good quality 4X Carl Zeiss optics and fast focus lock.

    3) Outdoor daylight scenes from ISO 80 to 800 are simply breathtaking, with sharp edges, deep depth-of-field (DOF), strong contrast and saturated colors, making this a great group picture camera (think family portraits at picnics etc). Although dynamic range (the total number of levels that can be captured from the darkest point to the brightest point of an image, without details getting clipped) is very limited. So beware of backlit scenes, and always point the camera in the same direction as the sun (the sun must be behind you) so your subjects are lit up as brightly as the background.

    4) Very elegant semi-metal chassis with brushed aluminum on the front.

    5) Extremely thin profile with the extra small battery, weightlessness: this camera will most likely be able to sneak into a concert without you having to convince the bouncers that you are carrying a bar of soap in your pocket.

    6) Generously sized 2.7″ LCD screen with plenty of light under room lighting, just barely viewable under very bright sunlight.

    7) VGA video recording with sound and Sweep Panorama.

    8) Uses both Sony Memory Stick and the very afforadable SD cards (Up to SDXC), although this feature is nothing new but it’s worth mentioning.

    However, the wafer-thin battery has very limited operation charge capacity, and the camera seems to be missing a few traditional controls such as creative mode selection (color, b&w, sepia, etc) and a “mode” dial to give you direct access to preset photographic parameters. Some basic manual controls (like those found on the W300) over the camera’s shutter speed and aperture were of course also missing, and due to the size of the camera, it is being operated and controlled by only a handful of buttons.

    And here’s a list of things that I did not like about this camera:

    1) A Sony processor instead of a Bionz processor, although I personally do not think the Bionz processor is that great other than providing faster image processing. The Sony image processor for the W530 seems to be providing the same quality of reduction for high ISO shots as Sony’s Bionz processor.

    2) No sports mode (may also explain the slower than average maximum shutter speed of just 1/1500 sec). Difficult to freeze moving objects when needed.

    3) No USB charging (Sony never had them though).

    4) Super slow continuous burst. At 1 frame per second, Sony might as well remove this feature altogether.

    5) No zooming during movie recording.

    But other than the few gripes above, I find myself enjoying the use of this camera completely. The camera is small, very light and looks really good up close and shoots half decent pictures under most conditions. The W530 also comes with a USB / Video connector (the video…

    Read more

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No

  6. Davey Williams "davey williams" says:
    114 of 124 people found the following review helpful:
    4.0 out of 5 stars
    Review by actual owner – great little snapshot camera, April 19, 2011
    By 
    Davey Williams “davey williams” (los angeles, ca USA) –
    (REAL NAME)
      

    I was able to get this model a little early, and was excited to try it out in – what better city to test a camera? – Paris. The last Sony snapshot camera I used was on a trip in 2007, and I was so dissatisfied with that camera that I sold it immediately after returning home. I was eager to see if Sony had improved their entry level cameras, especially the picture quality. I shall post some pictures to offer examples up in the product details, but these will be reduced in size for posting.

    Photo quality: My initial day out indicated that they have made dramatic improvements in both quality and speed. Photos in daylight were crisp and clear in just about every shot, and any that weren’t were only because I was shooting poorly on purpose to test the photos. I was also quite happy with the quality of shots in low light and indoors, which is where I noticed the most improvement over past Sony low-end offerings. There was some blurring in darker situations, of course, but for the most part the software was able to produce images that are well balanced and low grain. The 14 megapixel feature is great – there are many photos I’ve been able to crop and retain quality, and photos of, say, a stone sarcophagus can be zoomed in upon when viewing images later to see very good detail.

    I must also mention that the camera is very good at balancing photos. It almost always produces a picture with an appropriate contrast, and only in the worst cases did the image wash out in an area. For example, a shot of Joan of Arc (the statue, not the person) in Notre Dame came out very well even with a stained glass window in the background. The stained glass was bright but distinguishable, and the detail of the stone statue was clear and well balanced. Only in extreme cases – such as a shot of a black sculpture in the Louvre with a window behind it with blaring sunlight – did the camera fail to balance the image, but these are the kind of bad photography shots one would never expect a camera to take well.

    Types of Photos: Like most all snapshot photos, this camera will perform best shooting still subjects with plenty of light. Moving objects didn’t tend to blur, a problem I’d had with other cheap snapshot cameras, but the response time can make getting these shots difficult. Trying to capture a motorcycle passing an old church, my 7-10 attempts were mostly good photos, but getting the moving bike in the exact spot I wanted was nearly impossible.

    Features: Overall, this camera lacks in features, although for most uses I found it sufficient, and at the price I didn’t expect a lot of extras. The 4x zoom is relatively fast and easy to use, and about right for this type of camera. I was surprised there was no optical zoom given the high megapixels, but I can live with cropping on the computer. The panorama mode is nifty but not that useful – it works quite well in creating a long image, which of course will cause distortion in most cases. To use this feature, you set the mode and clich the shutter. The camera will prompt you to move it from left to right, and then it will generate the image (which is always impossible to see on the display owing to its shape.) Here I would have liked some add’l features – there is just ‘one size’ for panorama shots – you must sweep all the way across or the image will fail. This creates many shots that will need to be messed with on the computer later, which is okay but annoying. I was also disappointed panorama doesn’t work in an up and down orientation – you always have to sweep the camera in the same manner. You can, of course, hold it sideways to create a vertical panorama, but I really wanted some vertical shots tqking advantage of a larger width. Still, panoramas of the Tour Eiffel allowed me to create some fun, unique shots of the full height of the structure. There are not many other features – just some rudimentary quality settings, face detection, etc. Some might want to move up to a camera with more features, but I actually appreciated this in a point and shoot camera.

    Battery life: Here the camera could use some help. Perhaps I’m spoiled by my Apple products, but digital cameras have more or less remained stuck in 2002 concerning batteries. It’s annoying to have a separate charger, and battery life isn’t great. Three hours of shooting…granted, constant shooting…at St Denis drained it. Given how light and small it is, I’d fully support doubling the battery size to get twice the life. I’d also love for camera makers to start to move toward USB charging options.

    I’d also love it if cameras would start incorporating some onboard space. It feels like the dark ages to have to buy a card. 2 – 4 gig of onboard memory with a card slot for expansion would be nice.

    Overall, a great, small, fun camera that’s easy to grab and go. I wish Sony would re-imagine some of the ways digital cameras work, perhaps taking…

    Read more

    Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

    Was this review helpful to you? Yes
    No