In this modern world teenagers are getting more and more attracted towards various gadgets and their use. One such gadget is a camera. Fast progressing technology has made the accessibility of hi fi gadgets easy and people are using these with ease and comfort anywhere and everywhere they want. There is a wide range of cameras to choose from which all offer some or the other quality which makes it a cut above the rest.


 

SAMSUNG NX10 Except for a nice design, surprisingly good lenses, and its status as the first interchangeable-lens camera (ILC) with a relatively large APS-C-size sensor, there doesn't seem to be anything particularly outstanding about the camera's feature set, performance or photo quality when taken individually. Nevertheless, my overall experience with the NX10 and opinion about the camera is a lot more positive than the individual ratings would indicate.


A 14.6 megapixels camera with a 3 inch LCD screen and 400 shots in one fully charged battery at a time it has great apt features for the teenagers. at a cost of 22,420 to 44,420 INR the price is also affordable for amature use.While there are enough drawbacks to keep the Samsung NX10 from being a no-brainer choice among interchangeable-lens cameras, it's still a well-designed model that's fun to shoot with and capable of producing very nice photos.SONY ALPHA NEX-3

With an excellent high ISO sensitivity, photo quality, tilting LCD and an ultracompact body is likely to be liked by all camera users matures or professionals.Eagerly anticipated ever since Sony floated its wood-block concept designs at the PMA show in February 2010, Sony's debut interchangeable-lens models, the Alpha NEX-5 and NEX-3 are the smallest entrants to date, with a lot to appeal to both enthusiasts and snapshooters--and a bit that annoys, as well.A camera meeting the needs of the professionals at a larger scale the cost of it also varies largely and is not suited for maximum teenagers. it ranges from 29,116 INR to 31,403 INR. Overall, the photo quality is really good, and the camera has one of the best noise profiles in its price class, dSLRs included. Photos are pretty clean up through ISO 800, and you don't start to see significant softness until ISO 1,600, which you won't notice in a lot of scenes. At higher sensitivities like ISO 3,200 and 6,400, images may look soft, but the "grain" appearance is attractive rather than intrusive in reasonable light and there's only a moderate amount of clipping in the shadows (and some harsher luminance noise patterns) in low light.CANON 60-D

 An upgrade for 50-D users, high ISO range 3 inch swivel screen and 1040 dots a major leap in the list of interchangable lens cameras. it has a 18 megapixel camera and is a good run for its money. it costs some where around 43,918 INR. and is a faviourite to all the professionals in the field. The photo quality is excellent overall. It delivers relatively clean JPEGs up through ISO 800. You can spot some noise in shadows at that level that's not there in ISO 400 images, but there's little detail degradation. ISO 1,600 is about as high as I'd shoot JPEGs. In part, that's because at around ISO 3,200, hot pixels start to appear as part of the 60D's noise, and they become a serious issue by ISO 6,400. You can process them away if you shoot raw. However, the trade-off seems to be tonal range; you lose a fair bit of shadow detail, which the JPEGs seem to attempt to preserve, in pursuit of cleaner images.The 3-inch articulated LCD is also a great boon for shooting video. Though it's a very nice LCD, I frequently had trouble viewing it in direct sunlight.The Canon EOS 60D is in many ways a great camera: fast, feature-packed, and with excellent photo and video quality. Some annoying aspects of its control layout dim its shine a little, however, so try before you buy.
The overall review says that cameras are being more nd more popular among the youngsters and the technical knowleedge about them is known to lesser people. a thorough analysis of the cameras is impotant before purchasing it or bringing it to use.


NIKON D3100 The D3100 has a very good noise profile; it matches (and perhaps bests) the current leader in the budget dSLR category, the Pentax K-x. It produces exceptionally clean JPEGs up through ISO 800 and very usable ones through ISO 3200. (Adobe Camera Raw doesn't yet support the D3100 and Nikon Capture NX 2 doesn't provide sufficiently granular enough noise reduction for me to do raw versus JPEG comparisons). The camera delivers excellent color reproduction in its default SD mode as well--a nice change from some overly saturation-pushing competitors like Pentax and Sony--and its metering and exposure system work reliably and well.Its cost is around 29,116 INR and it has no feature to bring it above the brands like sony and canon. the camera can catre to the needs of the teenagers who jus begin to start theitr hand at photography but stilol the cost is a litter large than what it can offer. A very good entry-level dSLR, the Nikon D3100 delivers excellent photo quality in a body that's streamlined for experienced photographers, but relatively unintimidating for the less advanced. Its only weakness is performance; though solid, it nevertheless lags behind the competition. Posted By: Surabhi Yadav