My brother and I go back and forth vying for who has the most techno-toys! I have to say, we have similar taste, and we usually sight-unseen copy each other in a creepy, almost uncanny way! Several yrs ago we bought our first VCR -- a Sony (regular 8) , and sure enough, less than a yr later, bro goes out and gets the Hi-8 version. I got a wonderful Olympus digital still camera (D-490, with 2.1 megapixels), bro gets himself the next model up with 3 mp. We get a Sienna van; he gets the next yrs version, complete with TV. Well, this time I'm one over him. Last yr he bought a DCR-TRV250 for himself, and also even bought several for his employer (the military), he liked it so well. And this xmas, I one-upped him, I guess -- I got a DCR-TRV-350!
Truthfully, we aren't trying to one-up each other -- we just see a quality item, and with the way technology advances so quick, by the time one of us goes to buy, the "older" model is obsolete.
So why did we get a TRV-350? Well, we have tons of movies done on our old SOny camera -- this will enable us to convert over to digital easily. THe media is cheap (technically, the Hi8 tapes are just fine -- it's the camera that makes it digital); it's small, but not so small that steadiness is a huge issue; easy to use (I have yet to read the manual and have taken movies galore already, with dating, fade-in/out, you name the feature!); and it didn't cost an arm or leg (I recall getting it at
Best Buy in Novemeber for under $400). Consumer Reports rated it quite highly too.
When looking at cameras, look at the other "stuff" too -- what type media does it take, could that media become obsolete, what type batteries does it take, does it have more features than I really need, am I paying for cutting edge technology that 6 months from now will be cheaper (and most likely with fewer glitches)? And let's face it -- if it has so many dials and knobs and confuses the heck outta ya, you aren't going to use it -- or at least, not to the extent for which you're paying.
(I confess -that's one reason I love Panasonic stuff OVER Sony -- typically, it's much easier to figure out without prior knowledge -- the buttons just make sense. Just look at their stereo and home theater stuff -- it's much more logically layed out. Were it not for the Sony compatibility with some other stuff I had, I was seriously considering a Panasonic digital camcorder; I recall there was one rated highly also in Consumer reports along with the Sony I bought.)