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We hope you find our eighth annual Editor's Choice awards to be a useful resource as you brave the world of imaging technology. Photography has always been an art based on science, and never more so than today, as advances hurtle us along with startling speed. To produce this special section we turned to Executive Editor Russell Hart and a team of experts, this year including contributing editors Jonathan Barkey and Steve Pollock, Popular Photography & Imaging editors Dan Richards and Debbie Grossman, and writers Aimee Baldridge, formerly with CNET.com, and Phil Ryan, now CNET.com senior editor. In addition, Alexis Gerard, president of Future Image Inc., contributed an essay looking into photography's technological future. If the state of the art is this good now, just imagine what's coming down the road.
CHOOSE A SECTION:
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Entry Level D-SLRs Compact-weaned photographers can now afford leave the point-and-shoot nest.
Advanced D-SLRs Midpriced digital SLRs are getting so good that even the most serious photographers should consider them.
Professional D-SLRs Our professional camera of the year has an image sensor the size of an old-fashioned 35mm frame.
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Camera Cellphones The models we like best offer three-megapixel resolution, autofocus, and even optical zooming.
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Wide-format Printers Some inkjet models force you to choose between them and your washer/dryer. These 17- and 18-inch printers are big enough.
Fine-art Printers Epson is no longer the only 13x19-format, pigment-based kid on the block.
Snapshot Printers Slide in a memory card, plug in your digital camera, or send images wirelessly to these compact printers.
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Photo Storage & Display Multitasking & connectedness define the latest devices for storing, viewing, and sharing digital images.
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High-res EVFs The convenience of an electronic viewfinder camera meets the image quality of a D-SLR.
Superzoom EVFs Today's best models combine six megapixels with advanced metering, exposure, and AF options.
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Digital Compacts Less expensive than an ultrathin, their bigger, more ergonomic bodies permit increased zoom range and contribute to sharper pictures.
Ultrathin Compacts Our winner's innovative design builds an unusually wide focal-length range into a very small, thin camera.
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Lenses Our favorites include both those designed for full-frame 35mm coverage and optics for the smaller-than-35mm chips found in most digital SLRs.
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Lighting Portable flash sources still dominate a market in which small-scale product photography is still the driving force behind fluorescent.
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Imaging Software Is correcting shooting defects with software bad practice? These programs make us beg to differ.
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Imaging Essentials More and more imaging devices defy categorization, yet can be as indispensable as the familiar tools of the photographic trade.
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