Archive for February 18, 2010

Beware shutter lag in digital cameras

shutter lag first shot delay lindsey vonn
Don't become a victim of shutter lag.

Let's say you were lucky enough to be standing on the sidelines of Whistler Mountain's downhill ski course yesterday, waiting for Lindsey Vonn to come tearing around the bend. You had your digital camera at-the-ready to snap an historic photo of the skier en route to her gold medal.  As she passed, you pressed the shutter button…and groaned as you saw on the viewer screen that you only caught the tail end of her body in the frame. She was too fast, and your camera was too slow.

Ever happen to you? If so, you've been the victim of shutter lag.

If you can remember them, older film cameras took snapshots instantaneously. Today's digital cameras take a few milliseconds to process and render an image, resulting in a delay that can spoil a heat-of-the-moment shot.  The only digital cameras these days that eliminate shutter lag are expensive SLRs, used by camera aficionados and professional photographers.

In our tests of point-and-shoot cameras, we measure the shutter lag—or as we call it, first-shot delay—for each model and include the data in our digital camera Ratings (available to subscribers).  The fastest cameras have virually no delay at all, and the slowest have a delay of 1 second or longer.

If you aren't a subscriber and can't check our first-shot-delay ratings, at least try cameras out in the store to see how long it takes the model to actually capture an image after you depress the shutter. Otherwise, that fraction of second that distinguishes an Olympical gold medal from a silver might also relegate a frameable action shot to the digital trash bin.

—Nick K. Mandle

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Recommended Digital Cameras

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Daily electronics deals

Today's electronics deals, courtesy of The Consumerist:

  • B&H Photo: Sony BX700 Digital Voice Recorder $29 Shipped
  • PC Mall: Save $56: Refurbished Wacom Bamboo Graphics Tablet $43
  • Mwave :Pixxo 104-Key Wired Standard Keyboard + Optical Mouse for $9.99 w/ Free Shipping
  • Walmart : Viore 22'' LCD 720p HDTV for $198 w/ Free Shipping
  • Amazon: Sylvania NB530SLX Blu-ray Player $99.99 + free shipping
  • Buy.com: Philips SJM3152/17 iPod Universal Remote Control and iPod Dock $29.99 + free shipping
  • Amazon: Iomega Prestige 320GB USB 2.0 Portable External Hard Drive $59.99 + free shipping
  • BestBuy.com: TomTom XL 340S Live 4.3-inch Widescreen Internet Connected GPS $119.99 + free pickup or $7 shipping
  • Verizon Wireless: Verizon Wireless Buy One BlackBerry/Droid/Palm/HTC Phone Get One FREE + $50 off Coupon Code
  • Buy.com: Canon A480 10MP Digital Camera $90 Shipped
  • Adorama : Nikon Coolpix 7.1MP Digital Camera (Refurbished) for $49.95 w/ Free Shipping
  • Newegg : Brother Personal Fax and Copier for $19.99 w/ Free Shipping
  • Amazon: S3 Sportboard (Skateboard, Surfboard, Snowboard) for Wii Fit $29.99 + free shipping
  • Deep Discount: Blade Runner 5-Disc Complete Collector's Edition Movie (Blu-Ray) $13.99 Free Shipping

Related: TV Ratings and buying tips; Computer Ratings and buying tips; DVD & Blu-ray player Ratings and buying tips; Video game console buying tips and video: "Choosing a video game system"; Digital camera Ratings and buying tips; MP3 player Ratings and buying tips.

Neither Consumer Reports nor The Consumerist receive anything in
exchange for featuring these deals; the posts are intended to be purely
informational. These deals are often fleeting, with prices changing or
products becoming unavailable as the day progresses.

These posts are not an endorsement of the featured products or
the Web sites that sell them—though some of the sites may be included,
and recommended, in our Ratings of retailers for computers and other major electronics (both available to subscribers). Price shouldn't be your only criterion. Be wary of lower-priced deals that seem too good to be true, and check return policies for restocking fees and other gotchas.

For general buying advice for many of the products on sale above, check out our free Buying Guides.

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Daily Dispatch: Verizon teams up with Skype; Google donates $2 million to Wikipedia

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Combing through hundreds of blog posts and news articles daily, Dirk Klingner, our technology-trend watcher, sifts through the noise to bring you the tech news most important to consumers. If you have a tip on a story you want to share, leave a comment below.

[While Dirk enjoys some well-earned vacation, Nick Mandle will be filling in.]

Most online content should be free, users say (TGDaily)

They're most likely to fork out for the sort of thing they're used to paying for already, such as movies, music and games - more than half said this was fine…Nearly eight out of every ten said they would no longer use a web site that charges them, reckoning they can find the same information for nothing.

Google Buzz: Then and Now (PCWorld)

As the initial excitement over Google Buzz turned to fears of poor privacy safeguards, Google scrambled to tweak the social networking service and satisfy its users. The result is a Google Buzz that's fundamentally different than the one Google unveiled at its Mountain View headquarters last week.

Verizon Does Odd Mating Dance With Skype (TechNewsWorld)

Verizon has announced an odd partnership with VoIP provider Skype. The wireless network will offer a full suite of Voice over IP applications on nine of its top smartphones beginning next month, which will let users bypass their cellular minutes and make calls using their unlimited data connections.

Google donates $2 million to support Wikipedia (Associated Press)

The donation announced Wednesday matches the largest grant made so far to Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit group that oversees the 7-year-old Wikipedia. Ebay founder Pierre Omidyar also donated $2 million to Wikimedia six months ago through one of his investment arms.

Wikimedia, which gets most of its revenue from donations, has collected contributions from more than 240,000 individuals so far this fiscal year, mostly in small sums.

Lighter side: Kim Kardashian outs air marshal via Twitter (Cnet)

As breathless as a groupie at a Julio Iglesias concert, she booted up her tweeting app (TweetGenius, for those who care) and sent this important message to her more than 3 million acolytes: "I'm on the airplane…love wifi! I am sitting next to an Air Marshall! Jim the air marshall makes me feel safe!"

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When TV sound is disappointing, home-theater systems can help

For self-professed audiophiles, the increasing thinness of flat-panel TVs could be cause for concern. Quality speakers just can't fit into an inch-thick TV chassis, and the flat, tinny sound produced by a simpler speaker system doesn't do justice to the complex surround sound found on DVD and Blu-ray movies.  We test TVs for their sound quality, and very few rate better than "Good," our middling score.

If a dynamic listening experience is as important to you as a crisp, clear TV picture, a home-theater system can help.  Home-theater systems (also known as HTIB, for home-theater-in-a-box) usually combine a receiver with several matched speakers. While those who place a premium on depth and purity of sound might spring for components or pricier HTIB systems (and they can get very pricey), our tests have found a number of very capable HITBs that cost $350 or less. Consider the fact that some even bundle a DVD or Blu-ray player into the system, and the price becomes more palatable: One of the models we recommend includes a DVD player and sells for just $160.

For more on HTIB, be sure to read our free home-theater buying guide. Full Ratings of home theaters (including our recommended models) are available to subscribers. 

—Nick K. Mandle

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