BaxterEnglish 102March 12, 2001Digital Cameras            Digital cameras allow computer users to take pictures and store the photographed images  digitally instead of on traditional film. With some digital cameras, a user downloads the stored                   pictures from the digital camera to a computer using special software included with the camera.                    With others, the cameras stores the pictures directly on floppy disk or on a PC Card. A user then  copies the pictures to a computer by inserting the floppy disk into a disk drive or the PC Card  into a PC Card slot (Chambers and Norton 134). Once stored on a computer, the pictures can be  edited with photo-editing software, printed, faxed, sent via electronic mail, included in another    documented, or posted to a Web site for everyone to see.            Three basic types of digital cameras are studio cameras, field cameras, and point-and-  shoot cameras (Shelly Cashman Series  Microsoft Word 2000 Project 2). The most expensive         and highest quality of the three, a studio camera, is a stationary camera used for professional  studio work. Photojournalists frequently use field cameras because they are portable and have a  variety of lenses and other attachments. As with the studio camera, a field camera can be quite   expensive.    Reliable and lightweight, the point-and-shoot camera provides acceptable quality  photographic images for the home or small business user. A point-and-shoot camera enables  these users to add pictures to personalized greeting cards, a computerized photo album, a family  Thornton 2newsletter, certificates, awards, or personal Web site. Because of its functionality. It is an idealcamera for mobile user such as real estate agents, insurance agents, and general contractors,    The images quality produced by digital camera is measured by the number of bits itstores in a dot and the resolution, or number of dots per inch. The point-and-sh...