Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Kodak PixPro a solid pick for compact camera

- DON LINDICH

Question. I am looking for a good small purse camera with a long zoom for trips. I recently got my first smartphone (an iPhone 6) and it takes great pictures, but I like using memory cards to store and save pictures. I am not very tech-savvy and I like the simplicity of a camera and memory cards.

I would like to spend $100 to $200. Do you have camera suggestion, or at least a brand suggestion?

Answer. These days it is pretty hard to find cameras like you want, as most camera manufactur­ers have abandoned the entry-level marketplac­e. There are good reasons for this. The first reason is no one was buying inexpensiv­e compact cameras any more. That leads to the reason why people were no longer buying cheap compact cameras. The fact of the matter is the average smartphone camera absolutely clobbers any $100-$200 compact in terms of image quality.

I’ve mentioned my Google Pixel 2 XL phone in this column before and I am still flabbergas­ted by how good the camera is. Add in the ability to share instantly and automatic backup to Google Photos, and you have a formidable picturetak­ing machine. Even when I zoom in with the digital zoom, the quality still looks pretty darn good.

I definitely get better results when I take along my Sony DSC-RX100 or Panasonic DMC-GM1, but it has gotten to the point where you need that quality of compact camera to significan­tly outdo a good smartphone.

Of course, there are other factors like optical zoom, the ability to take along extra batteries, having a viewfinder, easier operation, and expanded creative capabiliti­es with a dedicated camera, but for most people out to capture memories the smartphone does a perfectly good job these days. I’d never go to Europe or Asia with just my smartphone, but to the local amusement park? The smartphone may be just the camera I need.

You asked me for a brand recommenda­tion, and that is probably the best I can do given the current marketplac­e. Check out Kodak PixPro cameras. J.K. Imaging (making cameras under the Kodak name, under license) is one of the only companies still serving this market segment. kodakpixpr­o.com

Meater Wireless Meat Thermomete­r: The barbecue season is upon us, and I have a neat gadget to tell everyone about.

I first saw Meater at Pepcom’s The Digital Experience, a press-only exhibition held in Las Vegas during the Consumer Electronic­s Show. Some excellent work by their PR firm afterward led to me giving Meater a try. Now that I have experience­d it I can’t imagine going without it.

My friends and family tell me I am an excellent cook, but I don’t always believe them. They don’t know how I fuss over getting the meat cooked just right. I often cut a piece of chicken and see pink inside, or overcook something because I misjudged when it was actually ready.

Now those concerns are a thing of the past. Meater is a wireless, rechargeab­le meat thermomete­r that communicat­es with your smartphone via Bluetooth (30-foot range) or Wi-Fi to tell you when the meat is cooked to your liking. The probe has two sensors that measure both the internal and external temperatur­e of the meat, using the combined informatio­n to determine its actual resting temperatur­e. It’s not just a thermomete­r, though. It is the whole package, complete with a smartphone app and a clever wooden storage box that also recharges the unit that make it great.

There is more to Meater than I can go in to here. See it at meater.com.

Contact Don Lindich at www.sound advicenews.com.

 ?? JK IMAGING LTD. ?? J.K. Imaging, making cameras under the Kodak name, under license, is one of the only companies still serving the entry-level marketplac­e, with Kodak PixPro cameras.
JK IMAGING LTD. J.K. Imaging, making cameras under the Kodak name, under license, is one of the only companies still serving the entry-level marketplac­e, with Kodak PixPro cameras.

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