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Olympus Camedia C 50 Zoom

Olympus AZ-4 Zoom


The Olympus Olympus AZ-4 zoom is a 35mm compact camera SLR camera (i.e. it has automatic features and the viewfinder sees through the lens, you cannot change the lens). It appeared in the 1989 Batman film. It is almost identical to the Ricoh Mirai, except it does not have a remote control socket and uses different batteries. It has a built in zoom lens which zooms from 35 to 135mm in approximately 52 steps. The zoom lens moves slowly compared to modern 35mm cameras, and the autofocus is slower and less reliable. However, the images it can achieve are of a very high standard particularly in terms of sharpness. It has the following features usually only found on SLR cameras:
  • Real image viewfinder
  • Manual focussing mode
  • Exposure adjustment
  • Shutter speed adjustment
  • Hotshoe for external flash It has the following features usually only found on compact cameras:
  • Autofocus
  • Built in pop up flash
  • Self timer (Timer to take photo 10 seconds after shutter is pressed)
  • Fill-in flash It also has the following features
  • LCD
  • Beeps when autofocus locks
  • Tripod socket Some models use 2 123 size lithium batteries. The version marketed by Ricoh can accept a large lithium battery or four AAA size batteries. There is also a Quartz date model, and the back on a regular model can be removed and replaced with a data back.

    Olympus C-3000 Zoom


    The Olympus C-3000 Zoom is a self-contained color digital camera system, produced by the Olympus Optical Co., Ltd..

    Features

    The C-3000 Zoom offers a 3x optical zoom lens, support for SmartMedia storage, and a 3.3 megapixel, 1/1.8-inch CCD image sensor. The camera supports automatic "point-and-shoot" type photography (P Setting), as well as three manual modes (S - Shutter Prioity, A - Aperture Priority, and M - Fully Manual). It supports lighting color correction (Flash, Sunlight, Clouds, Incandescent, Fluorescent, and Automatic). The camera supports an external flash via a proprietary connector and brackett, however it does not provide a hotshoe on the camera. The camera may be operated conventionally, fired via a remote control, fired by time delay, or fired-by-wire via software such as Cam2Com http://home.comcast.net/~smenche/Cam2Com/index.htm. The camera features F-Stop settings ranging from F2.8 to F11, and exposure settings from 1/800 to 16 seconds.

    Limitations

    The C-3000 Zoom, as with most consumer single-chip digital cameras, suffers from half-resolution imaging in the blue channel. Images taken of blue subjects will be unsuitable for use at the full 3.3 megapixels and will require downsampling. It does not support RAW image format. Also, the camera does not support the USB Storage class, which inherently means it must be driven using a camera control driver provided by Olympus.

    Package Contents

    ''From Owner's Manual''
  • C-3000 Zoom Digital Camera
  • Camera Strap
  • Infrared Remote Control
  • Mini-Stereo to A/V Cable
  • Warranty Card
  • LC-41 Lens Cap
  • Instruction Manuals, Camera and Remote Control
  • CR-V3 lithium battery packs (2)
  • Software provided on CD
  • USB Cable
  • SmartMedia card (8MB, including labels, storage case, and write-protect seals)
  • Instruction card Category:Digital cameras

    Olympus C-8080 Wide Zoom


    The Olympus C-8080 Wide Zoom is a digital camera model manufactured by Olympus. It was first announced on the opening day of the 2004 Photo Marketing Association Annual Convention and Trade Show. As of that time, the C-8080 was set to be Olympus’ first eight-megapixel digital camera for the high-end consumer market. One key feature that is described in the name is the optical zoom technique used in this camera. Most compact zoom cameras use the zoom functionality for telephoto work where one details in on a remote subject. This camera allows one to set up the lens to work as a wide-angle lens which comes in handy for group or landscape photography. Category:Digital cameras

    Votes For Deletion/Zoom Zoom I Will Butter Your Cake


  • 20:21, 3 May 2005 Tony Sidaway deleted "Zoom zoom I will butter your cake" (Patent nonsense, possible defamation)
  • 16:32, 3 May 2005 Jinian deleted "Zoom zoom I will butter your cake" (non-notable)
  • 12:38, 3 May 2005 DJ Clayworth deleted "Zoom zoom I will butter your cake" (nonsense) Sjakkalle 06:24, 4 May 2005 (UTC)
    Zoom zoom I will butter your cake
    Libelous hoax (zero Google hits). -- Curps 18:45, 3 May 2005 (UTC)
  • Delete ➥the Epopt 18:52, 3 May 2005 (UTC) :''This page is now preserved as an archive of the debate and, like some other VfD subpages, is no longer 'live'. Subsequent comments on the issue, the deletion, or the decision-making process should be placed on the relevant 'live' pages. Please do not edit this page.''

    Olympus E-1


    The Olympus E-1 was the first DSLR designed from the ground up for digital. This contrast with many of its contemporaries which offered systems which reused parts from previous 35mm film systems. It uses the Four Thirds lens mount and imaging system. This design choice means that because the CCD is smaller than a 35mm negative, Four Thirds lenses and camera bodies can be made smaller and lighter than those of preceding SLRs. Characteristics:
  • Lighter/more compact than conventional SLR bodies.
  • 5 megapixel CCD.
  • Good dynamic range and exposure.
  • Magnesium-alloy body.
  • Environmental sealing (splash proof).
  • "Supersonic Wave Filter" cleans CCD at each camera start-up (dust is shaken from CCD).
  • Dual USB 2.0 and Firewire connectivity.
  • Continuous shooting 3 frames per second up to 12 frames.
  • Hybrid white balance sensor (on external surface of camera and using CCD).
  • User upgradeable firmware.

    Features

    Sometimes the user experiences bright spots in long (greater than a few seconds) exposures. This is called long exposure noise. By turning on the "Noise Removal" (not "Noise Filter"), the E-1 will do a "dark frame subtraction" to get rid of these ugly little bright spots. Category:Digital cameras

    Mount Olympus


    ''This article refers to a mountain in Greece. For other meanings, see Olympus (disambiguation).'' Mount Olympus (also transliterated as Mount Olýmpos, and on modern maps, Óros Ólimbos) is the highest mountain in Greece, at 2,911 meters high; it is situated at . The name means "The Luminous One" in Classic Greek language. Mount Olympus is noted for its very rich flora, possibly the richest in the whole of Europe, with several endemic species. In Greek mythology, Mount Olympus is the home of the Twelve Olympians, the principal gods in the Greek pantheon. The Greeks thought of it as built up with crystal mansions wherein the gods dwelt. It is the spiritual analogue of the Upper World of shamanic cosmology. Category:Greek mythology Olympus, Mount ca:Olimp da:Olympen de:Olymp el:Όλυμπος es:Olimpo fr:Olympe ko:올림포스의 12신 it:Olimpo (Grecia) he:אולימפוס la:Olympus nl:Olympus (berg) ja:オリンポス山 no:Olympos pl:Góra Olimp pt:Monte Olimpo ru:Олимп sv:Olympen uk:Олімп zh:奥林匹斯

    Olympus Mons


    thumb|Olympus Mons Olympus Mons (Latin, "Mount Olympus") is the tallest known mountain in our solar system, located on the planet Mars at approximately . In the days before space probes revealed its identity as a mountain, Olympus Mons was known to astronomers as the albedo feature, Nix Olympica ("Snows of Olympus").

    General description

    The central edifice stands 27 kilometres (88,600 feet) high over its base (about three times the height of Mount Everest above sea level and three times the height of Mauna Loa above its base); it reaches 25 km above the mean surface level of Mars, since it stands in a two-kilometre-deep depression. It is 540 km (335 miles) in width, flanked by steep cliffs, and has a caldera that is 85 km (53 miles) long, 60 km (37 miles) wide, and up to 3 km (1.8 miles) deep with six overlapping pit craters. Its outer edge is defined by an escarpment up to 6 km (4 miles) tall unique among the shield volcanoes of Mars. The size of Olympus Mons is so great (roughly the size of the American state of Missouri) that a person standing on the surface of Mars would be unable to view the profile of the volcano even from a distance as the curvature of the planet would obscure such detail. The only way to view the mountain properly is from orbit. An occasional misconception is that the top of Olympus Mons is above the Martian atmosphere. The atmospheric pressure at the top is about 2% that of average Martian surface pressure; by comparison the atmospheric pressure at the summit of Mount Everest is about 25% of that at sea level, even so airborn martian dust is still present and high altitude carbon dioxide-ice cloud cover is still possible at the peak of Olympus mons, though water-ice clouds are not. Although the Martian average atmospheric pressure is less than 1% of that seen on Earth, the much lower gravity on Mars allows its atmosphere to extend much higher.

    Volcanism

    Olympus Mons is a shield volcano, the result


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    Olympus Camedia C 50 Zoom
  • Olympus Camedia C 50 Zoom

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