Dell Powerconnect J Ex8208 to zaawansowany podręcznik, który dostarcza użytkownikom szczegółowych informacji na temat wszystkich funkcji i możliwości sieci Dell Powerconnect J Ex8208. Zawiera instrukcje krok po kroku dotyczące wszystkich etapów instalacji, konfiguracji i zarządzania urządzeniami sieciowymi. Podręcznik opisuje również sposoby wykorzystania wszystkich funkcji sieci, takich jak konfiguracja portów, tworzenie reguł zapory, zarządzanie ruchem sieciowym i monitorowanie sieci. Podręcznik Dell Powerconnect J Ex8208 jest kompleksowym przewodnikiem, który może pomóc w pełni wykorzystać możliwości sieci Dell Powerconnect J Ex8208.
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Komentarz
I retro-review Canon's PowerShot Pro90 IS, a fantastic camera from 2001!
I like how in the early stages of digital cameras they attempted to depart from the standard SLR format into something where form follow function. Having a viewfinder moved to the left instead of in the centre makes a lot of sense.
Gordon, absolutely loving these retro reviews! Literally everything you've reviewed I've owned at one point and it's been a wonderful trip down memory lane.
Glad to have happened on this channel, and I love what you're doing here! My first 'enthusiast' camera was a 6mp Canon EOS 300D Rebel, a fellow US Airman in Okinawa sold it to me for a newer model. Before then it never occurred to me that 'real' cameras were going digital! What a great place and time to start a hobby in photography, been hooked ever since.
I'm enjoying the heck out of these old school digital reviews. Keep these up, there's so much to appreciate about them. Also, I have a strange inclination to visit Brighton, now. I've watched plenty other photography videos of this location, but this one has given me an itch. Might be that it's probably the only video I've seen of a sunny day there!
Love the video, thanks! My question is.. wow.. 20 years ago, good stabilization and a flip-out screen, something that most cameras today still don't have!!! What's wrong with this industry and progress???
Been binge-watching your reviews since I discovered your channel last night and I think this is my favourite camera so far in terms of video quality (or lack thereof!). Just the right amount of crispiness.
Awesome video! Really enjoy the retro reviews. Some of those photos looked great. Until cameras started doing the 640X480 video at 30fps, the 320 just does not hold up 15 fps. But understandable then. The quirky digital camera designs are always my favorites.
I loved that design and 20 yrs later its still making great looking photos
Loving these retro camera reviews! Keep them coming!
I'm really enjoying these videos. Being in the photographic retail business since the early 00's they really bring back some memories to me. There were so many outlandish designs back then, it's a bit of a shame that digital cameras have pretty much universally reverted back to a pre digital form.
That´s another neat looking device. Man, I really miss the innovative camera designs from these days.
I love seeing these reviews. The funny thing is my very first digital camera was a phase one back when it was called a light phase right after that I bought a nikon coolpix 995 to take fun pictures I still have it and I think it even still works!
See the video quality, I can imagine many pop video directors wanting a Pro90 for artsy, lo-fi footage... Amazing to see those lo-res' early digital cameras, which really did seem like desirable cutting edge tech at the time. I don't remember this Canon, but I do remember the Pro-1 as a great camera back in the early 2000s, that and the Konica Minolta Dimage 7 (??)
I'm split between thinking 2001 wasn't that long ago and being surprised that canon already had things like IS, electronic viewfinders, and raw files in a PowerShot.
This reminds me of the Canon Photura. The camera I always wanted as a kid but had no chance of affording.
My first digital camera was a Sony that took 3.5" floppy disks. lol.
There is something magical about CCD sensors... Their colour reproduction really transports me back to exactly that early to late 2000s era.
These retro reviews are great. Any chance of going even further back--to what were known as digital still video cameras?
Another great video. I waited until the sensors hit 8MP and VGA (or better) video before switching from scanning film to digital. The Pro 1 was one of 2-3 cameras I looked at for my first digital, but went for the KM A2. That was really ahead of it's time, but I replaced it with the horribly slow Nikon 8800 after half a year. The KM A2 was clearly better in most areas, but I wanted the 10x zoom and didn't regret the switch (most of the time). The Nikon was my only "compact" for many years until I got a RX10 IV. The 8MP sensor actually did quite well in IQ at base ISO - I compared it to a bunch of 1/2.7" and 1/2.3" based cameras. Both superzooms and more traditional compacts and found no IQ reason to upgrade for many years. The 8800 was of course surpassed in almost all other areas fairly fast.
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