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The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX100 series is a high-end compact camera part of the wider Sony RX series. It started with the DSC-RX100, announced on 6 June 2012, [ 1 ] and is part of the Cyber-shot RX line of digital cameras made by Sony .
Sony PSP Go!Cam (PSP-450) On November 13, 2009, when Invizimals was released, it came bundled with a new, redesigned PSP camera, model PSP-450x, which is a 0.3-megapixel camera taking photographs at a maximum resolution of 640×480 and video at up to 480×272 at 30 frames/s. The PSP-450x requires Official Firmware 6.00 or later.
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-RX1 is a series of premium fixed-lens full-frame digital compact cameras made by Sony as part of its Cyber-shot line. The DSC-RX1 was announced in September 2012. [ 1 ] The DSC-RX1R , released in 2013, is a variant of the Sony DSC-RX1 without anti-aliasing filter in front of the image sensor.
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX5V (2010) Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX400V (2014) with 50X zoom and GPS Sony Cyber-shot HyperXoom 50 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX300. Note: HX is an abbreviation for HyperXoom. All cameras used CMOS sensors, could zoom optically while filming, and had optical image stabilization. The series included bridge cameras and Compact cameras ...
The Sony α77 was the flagship for Sony's midrange Alpha SLT camera line. The successor to the Sony A700 , it is equipped with a 24.3 MP APS-C HD CMOS sensor and has a 12- fps burst-shooting mode. The camera is fitted with Sony's patented “translucent mirror” technology.
The camera includes a manual focus wheel, mic and headphone jacks, and a slightly larger imaging sensor, producing 3200K gross pixels versus the HC5' 2100K. The HC7 also sports Sony's Super SteadyShot optical image stabilization system. In December 2007, Sony released the HD1000, the shoulder mount version of the HC7.
The α100 shipped from Sony and resellers by the end of July 2006 with MSRP prices of US$1000 with the 18–70 mm f / 3.5–f/5.6 kit lens and US$900 for the body only. The camera retains the same autofocus lens mount that was introduced with the Minolta Maxxum 7000 in 1985, allowing the continued use of the millions of existing Minolta AF lenses.
The Sony Alpha 68 or Sony ILCA-68 [1] (named internally; ILCA- although coming from the "Sony SLT camera" line of cameras) is a mid-size DSLT camera announced by Sony on November 5, 2015 [2] and available for purchase starting April 2016 (US) and March 2016 (Europe). Sony markets it as having "4D FOCUS for fast, accurate tracking autofocus".