Source: Tom's Guide US | Keywords: graduation, gift, gadgets | Themes: Laptops and Notebooks, Digital Entertainment
16. Panasonic Lumix FS7
Panasonic Lumix FS7, $159.95
- Lumix DMC-FS7P Pink...
School’s out for summer. Give this camera to a graduate who plans to see some sights, backpack through Europe, party with friends, and chill out before taking the next step into adulthood. The FS7 is budget friendly, comes packed with features that up until recently were only available in high-end point-and-shoot cameras. Features like image stabilization, face detection, 4x zoom, and 10.1 megapixels mean this camera will be a major step above the camera phone of the young person in your life and will produce photos that will help keep memories of the fun times alive. The camera also shoots widescreen video at 30 frames per second (848x489 pixels). That means your graduate will be the one whose friends beg, “Put those photos and videos up on Facebook already!” Fun extras like shots framed with artsy borders and camera colors including black, silver, pink, green, and blue make this the perfect camera for a memorable and carefree summer. Dimensions: 2.14'' x 3.82'' x 0.85''.
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A bit late. Everyone I know has graduated.
No high-school school or middle school years have ended, and no quarter-system universities have finished the semester yet. Semester system universities held graduation, mostly, last week. I don't think it is too late to be thinking about graduation gifts at all.
No high-school school or middle school years have ended, and no quarter-system universities have finished the semester yet. Semester system universities held graduation, mostly, last week. I don't think it is too late to be thinking about graduation gifts at all.
No, ur wrong, everyone I know graduated 5 years ago. Duh.
My graduation gift is $1000 rent with a tenant who will do her best to kick me out.
Can I has your gift instead?
Here are my thoughts.

On the AIO PC: It's nothing more than a laptop without a battery. Nothing can be upgraded. Consider getting a Laptop instead. On the plus side, it is stylish.
On the HP Printer (from personal experience): Every HP printer I've used have had horrible problems loading paper. Consider Lexmark or Canon.
On the Panasonic Camera: Nikon's Coolpix and Canon's Powershot can be found at similar prices and are (generally) better cameras.
I must admit though, the N10Jc looks pretty cool
Here are my thoughts.On the AIO PC: It's nothing more than a laptop without a battery. Nothing can be upgraded. Consider getting a Laptop instead. On the plus side, it is stylish.On the HP Printer (from personal experience): Every HP printer I've used have had horrible problems loading paper. Consider Lexmark or Canon.On the Panasonic Camera: Nikon's Coolpix and Canon's Powershot can be found at similar prices and are (generally) better cameras.I must admit though, the N10Jc looks pretty cool
Hey Quantumrand,
Thanks for you advice. What if I asked for you to find me a computere under $500 with a tiny footprint (no tower) and a bigger than 17-inch screen. Would you be able to do that? That's where I think the cheapie AIOs come into play.
Rachel
Better as a wrist support pad. I have 3 PC's and I can only use this one 1 of the them. Really? I have to buy 3 separate Replicas for my PC's? In this economy? No thanks
Better as a wrist support pad. I have 3 PC's and I can only use this one 1 of the them. Really? I have to buy 3 separate Replicas for my PC's? In this economy? No thanks
There is a multi-PC version of the Seagate Replica, we just didn't review it: http://shop.seagate.com/store/sgat [...] .125882200
All I know is that the best gift buy would be great if I wasn't worried about other luxuries such as food, clothing, & shelter.