Kodak Plus Digital One-Time-Use Camera
This one-time-use camera is loaded with MAX Versatility Plus 800 Film / New! Compact Design / Indoor/Outdoor Use / 27 Exposures / Ektanar Lens
You don't need to spend $300 on a digital camera to get digital photos. Get the benefits of digital photography--easily and inexpensively--along with your traditional prints with the Kodak PlusDigital single-use camera. You can e-mail your photos to friends and family, enlarge prints, remove red-eye, zoom and crop, and print copies of your photos right at home. Best of all, the Kodak PlusDigital gives you traditional prints as well. Simply drop off the Kodak PlusDigital camera at your photo retailer offering Kodak Premium Processing services. At the time of developing, you pay for your prints at regular prices. You'll also automatically receive your digital photos on a Kodak Picture CD at no additional cost if you check the box marked Kodak Picture CD + Prints.
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Kodak Plus Digital One-Time-Use Camera Reviews
Really not a digital camera.it only allows you to get a free CD with processing. Misleading and any standard disposable camera will do instead on paying high $$$ for these.
They are using a play on words to make people think it is a digital camera. They are taking advantage of people. So, technically, they are accurate. It's regular film, plus digital scanning to get a CD of your photos. Buyer beware.
It uses regular film.
It is NOT.
I will NEVER buy from them again.
But morally, the name is MISLEADING.
The "Plus Digital" is the part that they get away with.
Yes, I believe the product name is very misleading.
You must look hard to find them, but they are out there.
There are true digital "one-use" cameras out there.
If I went in to a Camera store and asked for a DIGITAL camera, the clerk would show me a camera that would port pictures directly to my PC. . It would also give me the ability to edit out pictures I did not want.
So in buying the Kodak Single Use Digital Camera I thought I would get the same. Shame on me for not asking more questions. You can't edit out pictures you do not want and most agregiously you MUST take the camera and pay for hard prints at your local film developer. But, shame on KODAK for purposeful misrepresentation.
Not so, the Kodak product is nothing more than a regular single use camera.
However, the camera itself is still NOT digital. OUCHfalse advertising as many others have noted. It just doesn't have the technology to take the very best quality pictures so I hope Kodak works on this in the near future. Indeed, many of the pictures I've taken using this camera come out almost as well as they would have if I had used a more expensive, conventional 35mm camera instead. What Kodak doesn't clarify is that the only thing "digital" about this is that you get a free CD of your pictures developed when you pay for the camera. The word "digital" refers to the fact that the cost of the camera includes a "free" Kodak CD of your pictures.
A single use camera is your best choice if you're on a budget and want a Kodak quality single use camera; but let the buyerand Kodakbeware about putting any trust in this particular camera. Don't open the box and unwrap the camera from its foil paper wrapping until you're ready to use it; and make sure you use this camera before the expiration date printed on the cardboard box. I hope that Kodak remedies this problem quickly. Let's stop misleading consumers with this one, Kodak. Kodak makes a fairly good disposable camera with their "Kodak Plus Digital One-Time-Use Camera." If only the camera itself was digital. You also get 27 exposures per camera; this makes the camera useful for vacations or extensive photo taking days like weddings and other ceremonies. Overall, this single use camera is convenient and budget priced.
Yes, the camera takes some pretty good photos considering it's a single use camera. The 800 film helps make this camera very useful for both outdoor and indoor photos; and it's easy to carry this camera because it's so light and compact. Unfortunately, the pictures I got back are not as clear and crisp as they would be from a real digital camera or a conventional 35mm camera using the individual rolls of film you put in and then take out when you're ready to have the film developed. However, the camera itself is NOT digital, which is a awful trick Kodak uses to fool consumers into thinking they're buying a digital single use camera. Two stars, mostly because of the terrible way this is marketed. It can fit into a woman's pocketbook, a man's briefcase, backpack or just about any overnight travel bag.
If you need a camera that performs well in low-light situations, I recommend the Kodak HQ Max Versatility camera. The "Free CD" that you get with processing varies depending on who processes your film. I work at a professional photo lab, and I can attest to the quality of the film inside this camera. The Kodak PlusDigital camera comes loaded with Kodak 800-speed film. Ask about your local photofinisher's policy on the free Kodak CD *before* you drop off your memories. As an example, at my lab, the customer only receives the free CD if he opts to have his order sent to Kodak for processing. It produces results comparable to the Kodak PowerFlash that is, it performs superbly for outdoor and bright indoor shots, but it will tend to give grainy images in low-light situations.
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