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How do I use a digital camera?
Taking photos
with a digital camera is just like using a camera with film
- point the camera, press the button and take the photo.
The complicated
bits come when you have to get your pictures out of the
camera - you can't just take it to the chemists to be developed!
But
if you want to e-mail pics of the kids to their gran, or
put your car onto Aylesbury Autos, then digital cameras
are the business.
The Basics
A digital camera
is still a camera. If you've ever picked up a disposable
camera, taken some holiday snaps and had your photos developed
then you can use a digital camera too.
This means that
you'll need to keep the camera still while you take your
pics, so they aren't all blurred and you'll need to make
sure that you point the camera in the right direction!
If you
can manage that with an ordinary camera, you should do fine
with a digital one.
The
parts
The main parts
of a digital camera are just like the main parts of a film
camera. You point the camera at whatever it is you want
to photograph, look through the viewfinder to line up your
photo and press the shutter button to take the photo.
If you've got
it set up to use the flash then most cameras will check
how much light there is around, and flash if they need to.
Apart from the
top of the range cameras, you don't need to focus or think
about technical stuff like shutter speed or exposure - the
camera does all that for you.
The difference
is that instead of using film to capture the scene a digital
camera uses a special sort of computer chip - the same sort
used in video cameras - to turn the picture into millions
of dots which can be stored in its memory.
Once you've taken
your photo it is stored in the camera until you decide what
to do with it.

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