
It was a good election. It has most features you are looking for.
For me the best is the optic.
Eagerly awaited, colorful and eventful – these words describe the Kala Ghoda art festival, the most famous of its kind in Aamchi Mumbai and perhaps the country! The show is a pot-pourri of exhibitions, gallery and street shows, films, literary events, music concerts, dance performances, theater, heritage walks, a food bonanza, and a buzzing street festival. People come here from the entire country to be a part of it, either as a participant or a witness.
Kala ghoda arts festival is one of the most colorful festivals of Mumbai. It lasts for one whole week. People of different castes and creed of all age groups attend Nikon Coolpix 3200 3.2MP Camera this festival of colorful and action packed events. The best part is Music bands in the evening! All the cultures and communities gather together on the ocasion of this festival.
In the last version of this festival, the single most crowd puller was an amusing, plebicolor sculpture named “Mosquito Man” by the sculptor named Jayaram Gopale, who has come up with the sequel this time. The installation this time has the Mosquito kid walking a tight rope. Jayaram Gopale draws inspiration from the life and issues of the common man, which are reflected in his work. What he wanted to say with this installation? Let’s listen to his words…
Tension:
Stress...fear...struggle for survival. Day-to-day existence for most of us has become like walking a tight rope. No matter who or what or where we are... careful balance of life for every Mumbaikar is an essential skill.
Sculptor: Jayram T. Gopale (jayramgopale@gmail.com)
Venue: Kala Ghoda square, Camera: Nikon Coolpix 3200, Event: Kala Ghoda Arts Festival - February 2009.
Article source: http://www.abhijitsplanet.com/pratibimb/index.php?showimage=113
Help answer the question about Nikon Coolpix 3200 3.2MP Camera
Nikon camera option choices.?
I am planning on getting a new digital camera from Nikon in the coming months and I am stuck on two choices.coolpix s550- 10 mega pixels, 5X zoom, ISO up to 2000, $230andcoolpix Nikon Coolpix 3200 3.2MP Camera s600- 10 mega pixels, 4X zoom, ISO up to 3200, $300I want a small, compact, yet well equipped digital camera that can shoot well in low light and have a decent zoom level.The the s550 has a slightly better zoom, but lesser ISO than the s600. both have 10 mega pixels.If I had to pick one, it would be the s600 because of the better ISO. But will somebody ever notice difference between 4x and 5x zoom?
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{ 10 comments… read them below or add one }
this camera took really nice pictures in good light..and ok pictures in the dark. Upgraded and decided to go with another brand and have totally regretted that decision. From now on i will stick to the good that i know and buy Nikon.
I bought the 3200 new and it was a love hate relationship.
It was an early adopter model with many drawbacks.
Its dismal batery life was only matched by its lathargic performance.
in other words it ate up batterys quick and took pictures S L O W L Y.
It is now relegated to service as the kids camera when batterys are plentiful.
I don’t think Nikon is making this camera any more, but for the two years I’ve had it, it’s served me well. I’ve dropped it multiple times (once so hard that the batteries and card popped out), and I’ve taken pictures in the rain/snow several times. There is dust/condensation in the manual viewfinder because I have neglected to protect it from sudden changes in temperature. A few times, it has turned on while in my pocket. Despite all my inadvertant abuse, it continues to take fairly good pictures (considering that it’s a 3MP point-and-shoot). The 2048×1536 resolution makes for nice smaller photos, and if you use the macro setting, you can even have some control over the depth of field (although the setting is rather fussy).
I never got the software that came with it to work, so I just plug in the Nikon and use iPhoto.
As an amateur photographer, I find this camera fairly limiting, but for straightforward documentation (of, say, family or friend-style events), it does what it’s supposed to do.
excellent camera, value for money
unfortunately, the camera is not available as new anywhere anymore
I got this camera in July 2003 and it took beautiful pictures . The battery door broke at 8 months. I sent it out for repair to Nikon and they took 2 months to fix it. The fix if not under warranty was approximately $150.
It was a great point and shoot camera and I loved it until one day my daughter took a picture in the rain and it’s never worked again. I paid about $320 for this camera and I feel ripped off.
I won’t buy another Nikon because my son had a Nikon 2100 that went bad after 1.5 yrs. Don’t waste your money.
Excellent product, functional. Only one problem, when taking pictures in a very sunny day it is hard to see the display in the screen. Thanks
I just purchased a Coolpix L100 and am loving it so far. I mainly plan to use it as a point-and-shoot, and haven’t gotten to check out all the features yet. Picture quality and zoom are great.
One issue I found annoying was with the accessory kit that I also purchased. It comes with a rapid charger and 4 NIMH batteries, but the owners manual for the camera says “do not use rechargable batteries”. Wish I had known that ahead of time. Also, the mini-tripod is pretty much a joke.
Easy to use, we know nothing about digital and now have ability to send photos via e-mail. The pics look great. The screen is nice and big too. This camera is all all good good good. We tried a Kodak. It sucked, hard to use, couldn’t even get it to turn on half the time & only saw the picks on the camera’s screen. Never got them to transfr to the computer. What we did see was poor quality. Then it just quit working all togehter and went into the tash. Nikon Good Buy $$, Good Product, We Love it!!!
It was a good election. It has most features you are looking for.
For me the best is the optic.
I wanted a new camera for an upcoming event – something with a decent zoom and high quality. After some looking around I decided on the Nikkon Coolpix L100 as a good compromise between price and the features I wanted. I elected to buy the kit since the additional cost over and above the cameral was negligible considering what extras came with it. Having received it and used it for a few weeks now I’ll say that I’m happy with the purchase.
The camera itself is fairly compact, has a 15x optical zoom with some additional digital zoom and takes pictures up to 10 MP. It takes four AA batteries and an SD memory card and comes with shoulder strap and lens cap. I’m very pleased with the camera. It powers up quickly and pictures snap fast. The zoom goes from wide to tight and back very quickly using the W/T knob and all other interfaces are push button. The LCD screen displays sharp images on a 3.0″ screen.
There are several settings – Auto, sports, close up – and it goes on to have even more sub settings like: Party, sunset, outside, food (in case I snap a shot right before I eat) and more. I’m no professional but I’ve used auto and close up and both yield great photos. There is an Easy Auto mode but I’ve found this less than useful. Supposedly it selects the best setting and/or sub setting for your picture depending on lighting, movement, flash, whatever – it’s too distracting for me and I wasn’t always thrilled with the results so like standard auto much better. The flash is flipped up or down manually. Some may not like this but I do. It’s very easy to tell if the flash is on or off this way as opposed to other cameras where I’d have to repeatedly press a button to cycle through flash settings. There are also several in cameral editing tools.
Last on the camera is power consumption. I’ve been impressed. My previous camera was much smaller and only took 2 batteries but it would eat those up on a matter of minutes with just intermittent use – I’m talking alkaline batteries here. The L100 takes 4 but they’ve lasted for days each, way more than twice as long and on a more robust camera. I can’t wait to stick some lithiums in there and see how long they last. Incidentally the manual says to NOT use rechargeable batteries but one of the optional batteries in the camera menu is Coolpix Ni-Mh so that’s confusing (I’m thinking you really can if you want to but maybe it’s not the recommended type).
The kit itself seemed worth the extra [...] bucks or so as it came with – a nice carrying case with strap, lens cleaning cloth, 8 GB memory card, extra batteries (in addition to those that come with the camera), a mini tripod (honestly they took the prefix “mini” seriously here – it’s tiny but still a nice addition), a memory card reader (don’t really need it but hey), a battery charger that charges both AAA and AA size (again the instructions say not to use rechargeables for the camera but it never hurts to have a charger around for other things) and a memory card “wallet”. Of course all the cables and image transfer software are there as well.
I’m having fun using this camera and am looking forward to taking it to my event.
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