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Gear

Cameras, lenses, bags, tripods, printers and everything else photographers need to make great photographs. And yes, even film.

Most Recent: 
  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Olympus E-1

    Olympus E-1

  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Nikon D2H

    Nikon D2H

  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Canon EOS-1D Mark II

    Canon EOS-1D Mark II

  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Canon EOS Digital Rebel

    Canon EOS Digital Rebel

  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Sigma SD10

    Sigma SD10

  • Editors Choice 2004: Digital SLRs

    Nikon D70

    Nikon D70

  • Camera Test: Kodak EasyShare P880

    Big Yellow builds one smokin' hot rod

    Let's make something clear: this is not your mom's Pocket Instamatic. The EasyShare P880 is an 8MP electronic viewfinder camera with a 24-140mm equivalent f/2.8-4.1 Schneider zoom, dedicated TTL flash shoe, RAW capture, and tons of control. In other words, it's almost an SLR, at a pedal-to-the-metal street price of $530.

  • Camera Test: Olympus Evolt E-330 DSLR

    Breaking the live LCD Barrier.

    IT'S HERE -- LIVE PREVIEW IN A DSLR!
    Olympus pulled it off, with its new 7.5MP (effective) Evolt E-330 DSLR ($1,000 street, body only). It's the first DSLR to offer a live color preview in its LCD monitor. This, along with its excellent resolution, color accuracy, and overall image quality, make the Evolt E-330 a welcome successor to the earlier E-300. But are its live preview and other improvements worth the extra price you pay for the E-330?

  • Camera Test: Kodak EasyShare V570

    Kodak introduced its 5MP EasyShare V570. Small, black and silver, it is the only digital compact on the market that sports two lenses.

    For a while now, Kodak has been ignoring the growing glam cam market popularized by cameras such as Sony's T-series and Fuji's FinePix Z1. But that all ended at CES this year, when Kodak introduced its 5MP EasyShare V570 ($364 street). It's small, black and silver, and is the only digital compact on the market that sports two lenses, each with its own sensor. That's not just a testament to the falling price of imaging sensors. It's also a confirmation that style and innovative design continue to be driving factors in the camera world.

  • Microtek MS4

    Slide Show Steal: Making Slide shows affordable

    In November 2004, pop photo tested four digital projectors that were bargains at $1,000 each ("The New Digital Slide Show"). Fast-forward to early 2006: You can get a projector with the same resolution, array of features, and level of performance those four shared for $700 (direct)--the Microtek MS4. Now that's what we call progress.