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Monday, December 15, 2008

SanDisk 2GB ULTRA II CompactFlash Card (SDCFH-2048-901)

In the fast-paced world of Digital Photography, you rely on your camera and its capabilities. You also rely on your CompactFlash card to be fast, reliable and compatible with your camera. To meet the needs of professional and advanced photographers, SanDisk has developed new, optimized CompactFlash cards that have a minimum sustained write speed of 9MB per second and a read speed of 10MB per second, take advantage of the advanced features of high mega-pixel digital cameras, deliver superior speed. Now you can capture those high-resolution images even faster! Do it all with low power consumption, which means longer battery life. SanDisk Ultra II CompactFlash cards are ideal for your most demanding photo shoots, including photojournalism and event, sports, nature and fashion photography. All CF cards from SanDisk are Type I format, including SanDisk Ultra II CompactFlash cards.
Customer Review: Great card at a great price!
This 2GB SanDisk CF card is top quality and the price was surprisingly low. In addition to the lowest price on the web, the card arrived quickly which allowed me to take it with me on vacation and take hundreds of pictures. I have a 3.3 MP camera. I was using a 35MB card before I bought this one. With the 35MB card I could take about 30 pictures at the highest resolution. Now I can take over 1300 at the highest resolution! This was and is, by far, the best $11.50 + shipping I have ever spent. Get one.
Customer Review: Scandisk Compac Flash Disk 2 GB
Great response to my order delivery. Will purchase from them again. Thanks for delivering to those of us that are deployed.


Are you struggling to know how to use a camera? Are you confusing and frustrated with all the buttons on your camera? This article will attempt to demystify that camera of yours.

Probably the easiest thing you can do to learn how to operate your camera is to open up the camera manual that your camera came with. After you open it you really want to read it a few times and have a highlighter with you to underline important things you want to know.

Every camera is different and has different menus and settings .However, all cameras have a few common things.

Shutter Speed

All cameras have a shutter speed. Most automatic cameras even let you adjust this a good amount. Which is great since the shutter really lets you capture motion or action shots better. The shutter controls how long the light is let in to your camera. A long shutter would be 1/30 and a short one would be 1/500. Longer speeds make motion blurred like cars on the freeway at night turning into streaks of lights. A fast speed makes motion freeze. If you take a picture of a person jumping off a building with a fast shutter speed they will freeze in mid air in your photo. No blurriness will be evident.

Aperture Setting

The aperture in your camera controls the amount of light that is let in by adjusting the iris. The iris is just like our eyes. It enlarges in dark areas to let more light in and contracts when really bright. When you're in a sunny place a good aperture to use is something like f16. When you're in the shade a good aperture is something like f/5.6.

Al Sanez has a Free Photo course that teaches beginners digital photography tips. He also has another free program on how to Sell Pictures Online

Portable Generators

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