
Whether you’re looking for a compact point-and-shoot or a high-end SLR, we’ve selected a sharp shooter for every photographer and budget.
The cake: Ten frames per second, with a 28560mm optical zoom and HD video. The icing? A sweep modefor automatically spliced, 224-degree panoramas from the summit. Our only gripe: no raw format. sonystyle.com
PANASONIC LUMIX DMC-TS1 $400 This is what we’ve been waiting for. With minimal shutter lag, HD video, and a clear 128mm optical zoom, the 12-megapixel Lumix is the sharpest and quickest waterproof (down to ten feet), armored point-and-shoot we’ve tested. panasonic.com
CASIO EX-FS10 $350 Now that every pocket camera is in direct competition with the iPhone, manufacturers like Casio have started packing some truly amazing features into small packages. The 9.1-megapixel FS10 shoots an astonishing 30 JPEG images per second and 1,000 frames per second in HD videoenough to capture a balloon popping. exilim.casio.com
The 12.1-megapixel Optio is the favorite topside point-and-shoot of pro dive photographers, thanks to its extra-rugged sealsgood down to 16 feet for two hoursand Super Macro mode, which allows it to focus on tiny sea critters less than an inch away. pentaximaging.com
A compact that even camera snobs will love, the DP2 miraculously packs in a 14.5-megapixel sensor, video, and intuitive manual overrides like a focus wheel and exposure compensation. It’s slower than an SLR but stacks up in every other way. sigmaphoto.com
Two hundred and fifty bucks less than last year’s prosumer model D90, the HD-video-enabled D5000 has a 12.3-megapixel CMOS (that’s the good kind) sensor capable of shooting in extremely low light. What’s missing? An internal focusing motor to power Nikon’s beefiest lenses. nikonusa.com
For the money, you won’t find a better entry-level DSLR. The T1i bundles HD video and 3.4 frames per second of 15.1-megapixel raw shooting into a tiny, lightweight body compatible with all of Canon’s lenses. canonusa.com
Like the Sigma, the D-Lux 4 packs SLR punch into a point-and-shoot body. The D-Lux lacks the huge sensor of the Sigma DP2 but gains ground with a blazing-fast f/22.8 lens and the German engineering that’s made Leica the BMW of the camera world. leica.com
In an age when camera phones have become the tools of citizen journalists and Facebook addicts, this water-resistant, 5.1-megapixel, flash-, GPS-, and 3G-network-enabled cell could level the field between armies and the unarmedor simply make for better status updates. casioexilimmobile.com
It’s a long way from the K-1000 we all learned on in high school, but the 14.6-megapixel prosumer-level K-7 retains the rugged steel construction and many of the intuitive features of its classic film ancestor. Bonus: HD video. pentaximaging.com