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Computer Quandaries
by Dale Atchison
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Dear Dale,
Hello - I am a "first time user," and never
owned a Digital Camera. Regarding the purchase of a Digital Camera:
1) What brand should I consider buying?
2) Is 3.2 mil pixels suitable for general
photography, or would a higher pixel be better?
3) As for Zoom, is a larger # better, or a
smaller #, such as: 3.2X or 3X vs. a 5X or 8X?
4) What is the LCD and how does l.5" LCD
compare to a 2 LCD or larger?
5) What other equipment do I need to
install the photos on the PC, and what kind of photo card, batteries, and
recharger would you suggest? Is a 128 MB memory card sufficient for general
picture taking? Do I need a memory card "reader?"
Thank you.
Dee
Dee,
Buy a name brand, like Sony, Polaroid,
Kodak, Canon, Casio, Fuji, Pentax, HP, Konica, Olympus, Samsung, or Nikon. You'll get better service if you ever need it. On
the other hand, a brand you've not heard of will be cheaper, and maybe
that's okay for your first camera, the one you're going to use to decide
what you want next time, your 'starter camera', so to speak.
Yes, 3.2 megapixels is more than adequate
for general picture taking. I know, some self-appointed experts --- or even
some real experts --- might argue and say, "the bigger, the better", but
really, how big a shot do you want to save, and what kind of detail do you
need in order to enjoy your pictures later? 3.2 mp will create an image 1600
x 1200 x 64,000 colors, showing every speck of dust floating in the air
between you and the subject --- if you need more detail than that, buy a 5
mp camera, or even an 8 mp if a rich relative leaves you a bundle.
As for zoom, bigger is better. Buy the
most you can afford. Optical is better than digital; most good cameras will
have both; buy the one with the biggest optical zoom in your price range.
Digital zooms in, but only on a portion of the optical picture, so detail is
lost, sometimes noticeably.
I believe the LCD number just refers to
the size of the viewscreen you're looking at, both in arranging and
previewing your shot, and in viewing the finished product after it's saved
to memory. Again, buy the largest you can afford; you'll see more detail and
get less eyestrain.
Batteries and recharger should come with
the camera, or at least be listed in the owner's manual. I'm big on
rechargeable batteries; any camera that uses AA or AAA batteries should be
able to use the rechargeable versions --- get NiMH batteries, rather than
NiCads.
The camera will come with a connector to
plug into your PC. Make sure it has a USB connector at one end --- older
cameras used serial or parallel connectors, and they are not only slow, but
Windows XP might not let you use them. A memory card reader is convenient,
but not really necessary if the camera has a USB2 interface. If the camera
interface is USB 1.1, get the card reader, and be sure it is USB2, or it
won't be any faster than a wire plugged into the camera.
And 128 megabytes of RAM is plenty for
general photography; that's enough to hold 64-128 photographs, depending on
the quality you've selected. Of course, since RAM is still pretty cheap, at
least compared to the high prices of a couple of years ago, buy the most
that will fit in your camera --- you'll eventually want the extra capacity.
These are my opinions. They are only my
opinions. But, hey, I'm the guy you asked.
Hope I've helped a little.
Dale
Dale,
I'm running Windows 98 on a Gateway 2000 PC.
This morning I tried to wake up my computer, and it won't. When moving my roller
ball to wake it up, it stays black. I can see the cursor, and it moves around
the screen - the icons just don't show up. (Didn't know if that last part
mattered...) Do monitor screens go bad?
Linda
Dear Linda,
Yes, monitors go bad all the time, and
they're generally not worth fixing, considering how cheaply you can replace
one with a newer bigger better model. But it doesn't seem to me that yours
has failed, since you can see a mouse cursor on-screen.
You see, that last bit of info WAS very
important! If you have a black screen but can see a mouse cursor moving,
that means your monitor is working fine, but you could be in a DOS session.
It just CAN'T be this easy, but let's pretend it is: Even though you may not
see the letters appear, press and release the Esc key, then type EXIT and
press the Enter key. That will end your DOS session, returning you to your
Windows desktop.
If that doesn't work, pull the power plug,
wait a few seconds, then plug it back in and touch the power switch as
gently as you can to turn it back on. (Old Gateways are notorious for having
flimsy plastic power switch actuator buttons.) Should start right up, though
it might want to run Scandisk because of the power interruption.
DaLe
Dale,
It WAS that easy - maybe the cat fell onto the
keyboard?
Thank you!
Linda
Dale,
I've got a new PC with Windows XP and can't
find a driver for my Mustek 1200 III EP flatbed scanner. The old driver is for
Windows 3.1x/95/NT it worked on my windows 98 real fine, but not on XP. I've
gone to the Mustek website, but can not find a XP driver, do you have any
suggestions ?
Terry
Terry,
As Doc - Dave Dockery - told us once at a
meeting (I think it was November 2002), scanners and printers are the
devices most likely to need replacing when you upgrade to Windows XP. If
it's old enough that there were Windows 3.1 drivers written for it, I'd say
there's a very good chance they're not going to bother updating the driver
for Win XP - they don't think anyone is still using that model. By the
sheerest of coincidences, I also had a Mustek 1200 series scanner when I
installed Windows XP; I found a driver for it at DriverGuide.Com, said it
was for Windows 2000 so it should've worked, but no joy. I'd suggest
donating it to someone who has Win 98 and buying a replacement that plainly
says "Win XP Compatible" on the box.
Sorry I couldn't come up with any better
suggestions.
DaLe
Dale,
As you may remember, and against your advice,
I got a new Dell laptop. Instead of the standard PCMCIA slots, it has one of
those new-fangled "ExpressCard" slots. They are about the same size, but the
connector is different and the standard PCMCIA card won't slide all the way in
and connect. My problem is this: I have an expensive Verizon Broadband cell
phone modem card that's a standard PCMCIA type, and I can't use it on my new
Dell. I have searched around on the Internet trying to find some kind of adapter
that will allow PCMCIA Cards to be connected to a USB port or an adapter that
would convert the "ExpressCard" slot into something useable by standard PCMCIA
cards. Any solutions you can think of?
Skip,
Skip,
I did a Google search. Sorry, but I got
the same results you did. Every mention I found of "express card adapter"
was a request for such, not an offer. You're in the same pickle a lot of new
laptop owners are in, and you're all out a mega-bundle of cash because the
laptop salespeople didn't make the point clear when hawking their product.
DaLe
I promised last month that I would brag about
EasyCleaner in this month's column. I didn't exactly lie about it, I just
decided there was too much to say to tack it onto the end of the email help
column --- look for the article "Clean Up Your PC"
elsewhere in this issue.
Until next month, please email me at
mailto:Dale.Atchison@verizon.net
with any computer questions you might have, and I'll do my best to get you an
answer. If your problem can't be fixed via email, I'll point you to someone who
can help in person, either free at the TBCS
Resource Center, or at your
home or office for a reasonable fee.
Thanks,
DaLe aTchiSon
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