With few features and lacklustre performance, the Fujifilm FinePix Z10fd is an undistinguished compact point-and-shoot. But the size and styling — and price — make it a perfect present for the youth market, especially if they are more likely to share pictures online in social networks rather than prints in photo albums.
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The Shine Bar shares the celebrity good-looks of its parent phone, but a few basic flaws hold it back from being truly desirable, even for the budget price tag.
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The G800's chunky, pocket-straining dimensions promises a level of quality that isn't evident in the photos it takes. It's better than average, but well below the best we've seen.
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The HP Photosmart A826 snapshot printer offers an attractive design, is easy and fun to use, and works better without a PC than any other snapshot printer we've reviewed thanks to its huge touch screen, but we wonder who will spend AU$400 for a dedicated photo printer.
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Photographers would know where and when their pictures were taken, but the technology also poses privacy concerns.
Choices are sparse for camera buyers looking for some of the performance and control of an SLR but not its bulk. The options could improve soon.
Microsoft's newest web tool, Photosynth, is designed to give viewers a much zippier way to stitch multiple images together into a panoramic scene.
Adobe Systems' Mark Hamburg will work on the Windows' user experience. His recent Adobe work gives a clue about his design goals: 'elegance', 'personality'.
Adobe Systems wants to transform its flagship Photoshop software with an interface customised to the task at hand, a potentially radical revamp for software whose power today is hidden behind hundreds of menu options.
Want your grandma to start using Flickr but don't feel like explaining it to her? This handy guide will have her tagging photos with 'Lasertag Sake-bombs' before you can shake a stick at your beer.
Digital cameras have become an inseparable component of mobile phone technology. With the quality of these cameras continually improving, CNET.com.au is here to guide you through the various pitfalls of separating the gems from the junk.
Learn how to organise your images so that they're easy to find, safely backed up, optimised for printing and much more. Once your digital photographs are transferred to your PC, learn how to "process" them for the best possible results.
There are numerous Web sites which will host your digital photos for free, but if you want more customisation options, a downloadable program might be your best bet. We give you three options that won't cost you a cent.
Do more faster with these amazingly useful shortcuts.
It's never been so easy to share your thoughts with the world on your blog. If you want to add images to your online offering, you'd do worse than considering this clutch of cameras, each with their own blogging speciality.
We head out across the Web to find out whether these online image editors are picture perfect.
Swimming star Matt Welsh gives us the lowdown on his gadget habits and how technology is helping swimmers achieve superhuman speeds.
Flickr Video is just around the corner, but what is Yahoo going to do to make it work? We've got some ideas.
Whether you're headed to Bali or Belgium, a good holiday can become a great one with the addition of a few tech items to your suitcase. Here's how to tech yourself to paradise in five easy steps.
Add pictures, video, and sound clips to your blog page.
Resize, rename, crop, rotate, and watermark images with a single drag-&-drop using pre-sets.
Select important bits on the Web and publish them on NowPublic and your blog.
Copy pictures from digital camera, retouch photos, and organize them into album.
Create images, access exclusive designer collections, and print photos right from your camera.