![]() ![]() Typical digital camera viewing panels and competitive viewer products only offer one colour per pixel and a resolution of 80-100 pixels per inch. This ensures that every detail of your downloaded images is displayed with vibrancy and clarity – you can zoom your pictures up to a staggering 1,266 per cent (JPG only) before any pixellation appears. Additionally, this unique technology provides a superb resolution of 212 pixels per inch. Epson has incorporated exclusive Photo Fine technology, which utilises two core techniques – ultra-fine precision processing and the capability to deliver three colours (red, green and blue) per pixel. What sets the P4000 aside from any other portable storage device I have seen or used before is the quality of the 3.8-inch LCD screen. It has integral CF and SD card slots, but will support other types of card with an additional third-party adapter which is bought separately. With a massive 80 GB of storage capacity, it can store more images than my laptop. The P4000 is the successor to the popular P2000. Over the spring I tested two of them: the Epson P4000 and the Archos AV500 DVR. The last few years have seen a plethora of such devices arriving on the market, many now coming complete with a good-quality LCD screen. These units enable you to download images directly from your memory card in the field, so that you can re-format your card and start shooting with it again straight away. The answer is simple – get a portable storage device. One obvious difficulty immediately arises – how will you store the hundreds of images that you take on holiday, without taking a laptop or a sackful of memory cards with you? ![]() Now you want to venture further afield and take images on your birding or family holiday. So you have your digital camera and lens, and you've even perfected your photographic technique. ![]()
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