On Fri, 06 Jul 2001 19:53:33 Eric G. Miller wrote: > On Fri, Jul 06, 2001 at 10:39:20AM -0400, Peter S Galbraith wrote: > > > > John S. J. Anderson wrote: > > > > > >>>>> On 06 Jul 2001 14:06:06 +0400, Ilya Martynov <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said: > > > > > > Ilya> Or any advice on another relatively cheap and good digital > > > Ilya> camera which can be used with Linux? > > > > > > Have you considered the Sony Mavica series? They write picture files > > > to standard VFAT filesystem floppy disks > > > > I have wondered about this. I fill up a 32MB memory card pretty > > quickly when taking pictures at 3.1Mpixels. A single picture is > > usually around 1.1 to 1.3 MB, so that would be one floopy per > > picture. I wouldn't want to (1) carry that many floppies, (2) to > > forced to change the floppy after every picture and (3) feed-in > > all these (slow reading) floppies to my PC later. > > > > This made me think the floppy thing was not viable. How does it > > work out for you? > > I've seen a review for a camera (by Sony I think) that uses LS-120 disks > and talks via USB. Nice sounding thing is you can also use the LS-120 > drive for anything. But, anything with a drive will probably suck more > battery. > > I've used several different Epson cameras with good success...
I'll toss in my 2 cents here. <g> I've used the Sony MVC-FD81 and it worked just fine. You can fit around 10 - 40 pics per disk, depending on the resolution. Mpeg movie is about 1 min per disk, with sound. (never used the sound feature though) All in all, they are nice cameras and easy to transfer to you're box, since it is floppy disk. The battery is rechargable, which is nice. I'd recommend 2 batteries though. Take a look at: http://cgi.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=125324748 (as an example) Dana