Printing & Cameras
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Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ18 review Builds on its excellent predecessor with more of everything, but the competition has caught up.£230 -
best buy
Panasonic HDC-SD90 review Great all-round image quality in a compact package - the best mid-range camcorder we've seen.£400 -
Sony Alpha DSLR-A580L review Feature-packed and capable of high quality photos, but automatic exposures could be better.£600 -
GE DV1 review It’s inexpensive and easy to use, but the DV1’s video quality is distinctly average.£90 -
Nikon Coolpix P7000 review High image quality and lots of impressive features, but painfully slow menus are enough to put us off£320 -
Canon PowerShot SX30 IS review The enormous 35x zoom is tempting but neither the lens nor the sensor lives up to expectations at this price.£335 -
Kodak Mini review Great for low-light web-quality footage, but the Mini’s dim daytime video counts against it.£39 -
Samsung NX100 review Superb controls squeezed into a small space, but poor image quality in low light is a significant flaw for a large-sensor camera.£386 -
Pentax K-5 with 18-55mm lens review The video mode is disappointing but photo quality is marginally the best we’ve ever seen. Rival cameras offer better value, though.£1029 -
Canon EOS 60D with 18-135mm lens review Superior ergonomics – particularly the bigger viewfinder and articulated screen – make this a shrewd choice£1029 -
Epson Stylus Photo PX660 review It’s a great MFP for photo enthusiasts and is cheap to run, but the PX660 costs too much. We'd choose Canon's PIXMA MG5150.£112 -
Panasonic Lumix DMC-GH2 with 14-140mm lens review Photo quality fails to live up to the high price, but for videos, the smooth autofocus, extensive options and sublime quality are a winning combination.£1050 -
best buy
Nikon D3100 18-55VR Kit review Not without flaws, but sumptuous photos and videos at a sensible price make it an unbeatable package£459