Posted: Sat Oct 20, 2007 1:32 pm
Both megapixel count and lens/CCD quality are important. The advice we give people (I work in IT Support) is to look for anything above 4mp (which is nearly all cameras now) but with a good mecahnical zoom lens (digital zoom is simply a cheat). As my personal preference I use Canon because most Canons have a simple Janet & John point'n'click mode but also allow more advanced settings to be changed for those who like to experiment.
But anything costing £80+ from a good make (Canon/Nikon/Fuji/Sony etc) will probably be all you need.
Moggie enthusiasts may want to check that the macro mode works with flash enabled (not all cameras do this).
Having said all this, like CJ, my old Canon Powershot is only 2.2mp but has a Carl Zeiss lens and takes great looking photos for web use etc, but if I need fine detail or want to enlarge areas I use a more modern one. Also it's a bit on the heavy/clunky side these days...
Whatever you get, allow £10 or so for a 512mb/1gb memory card as all cameras require these if you want to take more than a handful of photos...
Cheers - Adam.
But anything costing £80+ from a good make (Canon/Nikon/Fuji/Sony etc) will probably be all you need.
Moggie enthusiasts may want to check that the macro mode works with flash enabled (not all cameras do this).
Having said all this, like CJ, my old Canon Powershot is only 2.2mp but has a Carl Zeiss lens and takes great looking photos for web use etc, but if I need fine detail or want to enlarge areas I use a more modern one. Also it's a bit on the heavy/clunky side these days...
Whatever you get, allow £10 or so for a 512mb/1gb memory card as all cameras require these if you want to take more than a handful of photos...
Cheers - Adam.