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Nikon Coolpix cameras are organized into five different lines. The line in which a particular camera is placed is indicated by the letter which is the first character of its model number. The lines are: the (A) series, the (AW) all weather series, the (L) life series, the (P) performance series, and the (S) style series. [1]
The Coolpix 8700 was a digital camera manufactured and distributed by Nikon. It was introduced in 2004. It featured 8.0 megapixels (effective), and a 8x optical/4x digital zoom. It was part of the Nikon Coolpix line of cameras.
The Nikon Coolpix L100 provided good results without the operator needing to acquire professional-level skills. The L100 still is a good choice for beginners and amateurs. With an optical zoom of 15x, it is an improvement over older compact digital cameras that generally had a maximum optical zoom of 5x.
A Nikon CoolPix 900 (1998), an early swivel-lens design. A swivel lens is a lens that freely rotates while attached to a camera body. They are used on some compact digital and video cameras . These lenses make it easy for a photographer to aim a camera without moving around too much. Swivel lenses come in different sizes and shapes.
Canon PowerShot G11, Canon PowerShot G12, Canon PowerShot S90, Canon PowerShot S95, Nikon CoolPix P7000, Nikon CoolPix P7100, Olympus E-410, Olympus E-510, Panasonic FZ50, Fujifilm FinePix HS10, Samsung EX1
The L20, announced by Nikon on April 1, 2009, is rather small camera (even by compact standards), [1] measuring 96.5 mm × 61 mm × 29 mm, it weighs almost 135 g (including batteries and memory card). Its sister model L19 is about 4 g lighter, because its LCD is comparatively [2] smaller. Like all in the Nikon Coolpix series it has a shining ...
Nikon's line of fixed-lens digital cameras. ... Pages in category "Nikon Coolpix cameras" The following 42 pages are in this category, out of 42 total.
Most digital cameras support the ability to choose among a number of configurations, or modes for use in various situations. Professional DSLR cameras provide several manual modes; consumer point-and-shoot cameras emphasize automatic modes; amateur prosumer cameras often have a wide variety of both manual and automatic modes.