BUY COMPACT DIGITAL CAMERA. CAMERA STORES MINNESOTA. LUMIX PANASONIC CAMERA.
Buy Compact Digital Camera
A camera that records and stores digital images
Usually captures images with the help of a CCD chip. The image data received is then saved to special memory cards or other storage media. (SmartMedia, xD-Picture Card, Compact Flash, Memory Stick, SD Card, MMC Card)
a camera that encodes an image digitally and store it for later reproduction
A digital camera (also digicam or camera for short) is a camera that takes video or still photographs, or both, digitally by recording images via an electronic image sensor.
have the property of being packable or of compacting easily; "This powder compacts easily"; "Such odd-shaped items do not pack well"
(of a person or animal) Small, solid, and well-proportioned
closely and firmly united or packed together; "compact soil"; "compact clusters of flowers"
Having all the necessary components or features neatly fitted into a small space
a small cosmetics case with a mirror; to be carried in a woman's purse
Closely and neatly packed together; dense
Obtain in exchange for payment
Procure the loyalty and support of (someone) by bribery
obtain by purchase; acquire by means of a financial transaction; "The family purchased a new car"; "The conglomerate acquired a new company"; "She buys for the big department store"
bargain: an advantageous purchase; "she got a bargain at the auction"; "the stock was a real buy at that price"
Pay someone to give up an ownership, interest, or share
bribe: make illegal payments to in exchange for favors or influence; "This judge can be bought"
My First Digital Camera
The Fujifilm MX-2900 Zoom, bought in October 2000.
It was quite a chunky compact, but I could just about get it into a big coat pocket.
The design was rather avant-garde, with a sliding power switch and a weird tab that you moved up and down to control the mighty 3x zoom lens. It took an age to power up. Each of the four arrow keys had a little red LED at the end, and they used to flash one by one round in a circle while the camera was processing, which was seemingly most of the time. It would take several seconds to load an image onto the 2" LCD screen.
It used thin and fragile-looking SmartMedia cards, and I shelled out another ?50 for a whopping 64MB card. The camera only came with a serial cable, and until I bought a separate USB card reader, it would take about four hours to upload the contents of this card to my PC.
The results were not great, with horrendous edge effects, jpeg artefacts and noise, but fortunately back then I was ignorant enough to either not notice or not be too bothered by such things.
It can't have been that bad because I carried on using it up until 2005.
(I'd have liked to have a play around with it again, but the battery doesn't seem to accept any charge, presumably because it's been unused for so long.)