Digital Camera - Sony
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Sony Alpha 350 DSLR review
Sony Handycam HDR-TG3E- Handycam Demonstration - IFA 2008
Sony Alpha A350- Camera Demonstration- IFA 2008
Kat from Shiny Media checks out the Sony Alpha range with Paul, a Sony representative
The Alpha A200 is Sony’s third DSLR and the successor to its debut model, the best-selling Alpha A100. Launched at CES in early January 2008, the A200 is Sony’s new entry-level DSLR, and as we learnt at the PMA show a few weeks later, the base model upon which at least two subsequent DSLRs would build. The Alpha A200 shares the same 10.2 Megapixel CCD sensor as its predecessor, but squeezes it into what Sony describes as a smaller and lighter body. Like the two previous Alpha DSLRs, the A200 still features built-in stabilisation which shifts the sensor to counteract camera shake. Like other built-in sensor-shift systems, the benefit is enjoying stabilisation on any lens you attach, although the downside is not being able to see the stabilising effect through the optical viewfinder as you compose your photo.
Digital SLRs have never offered better value and if you’re in the market for a new one, chances are you’re carefully weighing up the latest crop of 10 Megapixel models. And while there’s at least five to now choose from, it’s fair to say the greatest attention is currently focused on the Canon EOS 400D / Rebel XTi, Nikon D80 and Sony A100. These are the big three, all available right now and all generating more excitement than any others.
The big question though is which one’s best for you? We’ve already reviewed all three at Cameralabs, but to answer the burning questions of potential buyers we’re pitching them directly against each other in this group test. Each model has many pros and cons and over the following pages we’ll detail their differences and point out where one takes the lead over the others.
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