By Shawn Smith


Photography has come such a long way during the last few years. From the normal camera that used film to the arrival of the digital camera which paved the way for professional Melbourne photographers to now carry digital SLR capable of producing fantastic photos now employed in journalism and where just about all visible pictures come from.







The benefits of digital photography are common. These include having the ability to store all of your images on a tiny SD card and not having to carry around tons of film like with traditional cameras. When digital cameras originally came out, the novelty of it meant the public were paying a lot for quality that was not so great. As recently as 4 years ago, digital cameras with only 3.2 megapixel quality were selling for $500+. Now as you look in hindsight, many have regretted their purchase for "poor" quality pictures and were essentially paying for convenience and to be an early adopter.







Additionally, many of those cameras only ran on alkaline batteries and drained them very swiftly, thus the price of maintaining a digital camera was quite high. SD and memory chips didn't have great capacity so many travelling users were left removing footage that had not been uploaded to their PC so as to take new shots.







Thankfully , technology has kept up with the times and inbuilt or purpose built batteries now last a decent quantity of time and the memory sticks come in much great storage sizes allowing people to take copious amounts of pictures before the card is full.







Now even the everyday person can afford to purchase digital SLR cameras capable of producing professional looking and stunning shots as if they were a professional photographers themselves. If you have some discretionary earnings not being put to use, I can think of worse ways of spending your cash than buying a digital camera to catch your memories.




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