Digital Camera News
The Barbie Cam Has Finally Arrived
November 15, 2004 – Barbie is a material girl living in a now digital world. Oregon Scientific, Inc. acquired a license from Mattel, Inc. to begin production of a Barbie brand digital camera. The announcement was made in September and the product will be available November 30th.
Don’t expect this camera to take glamorous pictures; it is more of a toy than a quality camera. It can shoot at 640 x 480 or 320 x 240 resolution. The Barbie camera has 8MB of internal memory, so it can store up to 20 pictures at its highest resolution. The hottest features on this camera are the LCD, a self-timer, web cam capabilities, and a pseudo-movie mode that bunches 99 images into a movie clip. While the camera doesn’t take the best pictures, it can still satisfy the 8 to 12-year-old girl’s snap-happy ways at a sleepover or school event. And with the Barbie digital camera, parents won’t have to worry about their expensive digital camera coming home abused.
The Barbie digital camera comes in the classic pink color for $34.99. It also comes with a Barbie Photo Designer CD-ROM and an ArcSoft PhotoImpression Barbie that allows users to download photos to a computer, as well as manipulate photos and access Barbie clipart and templates. Users can create all things Barbie, including calendars, greeting cards, and Barbie picture frames.
This isn’t the first time Oregon Scientific has manufactured Barbie brand merchandise; in the past few years, the company created an electronic interactive Barbie dictionary, laptop, and talking storybook.
Latest News
& Reviews
-
24-May-2012
Nikon D4 Digital Camera Review
While probably the finest still camera we’ve tested to date, the Nikon D4 also has a surprise in store: video that’s on par with the king of HDSLR video, the Canon 5D Mark III. Read on for our full performance breakdown of Nikon’s new flagship. Read More...
-
23-May-2012
Fujifilm X-Pro1 Digital Camera Review
Fujifilm’s old-school X-Pro1 is not only the company’s best camera, but one of the best mirrorless models we’ve ever tested. Read More...
Top Rated Digital Cameras
-
Digital SLRs
Point & Shoots
-

$5,999.951Nikon D4
While probably the finest still camera we've tested to date, the Nikon D4 also has a surprise in store: video that's on par with the king of HDSLR video, the Canon 5D Mark III. Read on for our full performance breakdown of Nikon's new flagship. Read full 7-part review
$5,999.95
$499.001Panasonic Lumix FZ150
Excellent image quality, speedy performance, and a great design add up to the best superzoom that has ever graced our labs. That distinction seems to change hands every week, but trust us when we say that the FZ150 is a truly great camera. Read full 16-part review
$499.00 -

$3,499.002Canon EOS 5D Mark III
We have finally put the Canon 5D Mark III through a full, rigorous performance test and it sits among the best DSLRs we've ever tested. Read our full review to see how Canon has improved in all the areas the 5D Mark II struggled. Read full 7-part review
$3,499.00
$449.992Sony Cyber-shot HX100V
This professionally-geared ultrazoom offers some of the best color accuracy we've ever seen. It's a shame the other scores weren't quite so strong. Read full 16-part review
$449.99 -

$1,999.993Sony Alpha A77
Sony's blazing fast, top-of-the-line SLT A77 has just about everything we could ask for in a modern system camera. Read full 7-part review
$1,999.99
$799.993Canon PowerShot G1 X
Canon's new G1 X features a giant 1.5-inch CMOS sensor and the same manual control that we loved on the G12. Read full 7-part review
$799.99 -

$1,700.004Fujifilm X-Pro1
Fujifilm's old-school X-Pro1 is not only the company's best camera, but one of the best mirrorless models we've ever tested. Read full 7-part review
$1,700.00
$429.994Canon PowerShot SX40 HS
Canon's SX30 got a CMOS makeover that resulted in the SX40 HS, an impressive ultrazoom that captures beautiful shots in almost any scenario. Read full 16-part review
$429.99 -

$799.005Nikon D5100
The D5100 is the latest entry-level DSLR from Nikon, with full 1080/30p video, an articulated LCD, and the same image sensor as the D7000. It lacks an internal focus motor, but we found it produced some of the most accurate colors we've seen yet. Read full 7-part review
$799.00
$399.995Panasonic Lumix DMC-FZ47
Panasonic resists the urge to cram more megapixels and more focal length into their latest ultrazoom. The FZ47 instead focuses on image quality and features, resulting in an incredibly strong camera that we loved shooting with. Read full 16-part review
$399.99
Find the right digital camera for you.