Yay! for new-camera-having, meara. I'm envious. And applause for picking a model that doesn't use proprietary batteries.
When your sister reports in with the type of camera she has to spare, you can probably find comparison info here: [link]
Spike ,'Sleeper'
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Yay! for new-camera-having, meara. I'm envious. And applause for picking a model that doesn't use proprietary batteries.
When your sister reports in with the type of camera she has to spare, you can probably find comparison info here: [link]
Hey, geex, I want to get some new earphones for my iPod--the ones that come w/ it hurt my ears after a while. What are good ones to get?
I got the ones from the Apple store that come with rubber-ish earpieces in three different sizes. They've been great.
And applause for picking a model that doesn't use proprietary batteries
Yeah, I figure it may eat through AAs, but at least when I'm travelling, I'll be able to find more. Recharging not always easier.
I've been thinking of getting new headphones...possibly ones that are not white and screaming "I've got an iPod! Mug me!", given my neighborhood. But I do love how the earbuds take up next to no space in my bag/pocket/etc.
Rio -- Consuela asked the same question last month. Start here: Consuela "Buffistechnology 2: You Made Her So She Growls?" Apr 13, 2005 5:22:51 pm PDT
I use rechargeable AAs, and they are almost as easy to come by as alkaline AAs.
I use rechargeable AAs, and they are almost as easy to come by as alkaline AAs.
Traveling internationally, though, you can't always depend on being able to recharge them.
Is there a wide differential in how long rechargable AAs hold their charge? I tried to use them when I had a pager, but it wasn't even slightly sensical. Really, only Duracell or Eveready (perhaps other name brands) were worth it. Generics or rechargables were too much work.
Thanks, Jon!
There is certainly a differential by type, if that's what you mean. Dunno the differentials by brands of the same type.
I keep three sets of NiMHs for my camera and recharge them once a month, whether I've used them or not. They've held up well for three years now.
My Sony laptop (four years old now) came with a lithium-ion battery, and I bought a second battery to go with it (it swapped out with the floppy drive). They got deep discharged a couple times in the first year, but mostly I ran off a power brick and the batteries stayed topped up. After the first year the add-on battery stopped taking a charge, and the original battery is down to about half its original capacity—it's only good for 30 minutes of word processing or genealogy apps., or 20 minutes of DVD at last test. The batteries cost too much to shell out for more, and they stopped making them two years ago, anyway, so I am tethered to the power brick.
My point is, I've had a good experience with the NiMH rechargeable AAs for my camera, and a bad experience with rechargeable Li-ion in another format, so I haven't yet been tempted to try Li-ion rechargeable AAs (they come bundled in pairs and are called CR-V3s), even though their capacity and endurance is reported to be much better.