Originally posted by TonyF
I am a bit scared of the Eco hike pictures you are going to post.
I saw a picture of the digital camera you were looking at on another thread. If that is your upgrade camera, your camera must have been bigger than a suitcase.
Kidding aside, I look forward to viewing the pictures. I'm sure they are awesome.
Oh, you must mean that new digital camera. The most advanced out on the market so far.

Yeah, it is tough to carry around but it came with a handy neck strap.
I actually bought my very first digital camera last December. It's a very basic, point-and-shoot, Nikon Coolpix 2200. It's only a 2 mega-pixel but I wanted it so that I could take pictures and post them on the web easily. As you can see from the pictures above, even a 2 MP camera can do that quite well. I've also had some standard sized prints made from the camera and they turned out quite nice too.
But, I am used to the adaptability and adjustable features of an SLR. I have a 35mm SLR but I would love a digital.
SLR stands for Single Lens Reflex camera. Basically, when you look through the view-finder of a camera there are two options. In SLRs, the image that you are seeing through the viewfinder is actually the same image that is going through the lens of the camera. Most point-and-shoot cameras have a "viewfinder" that does not use the actual camera lens to frame the picture. So, when you line up a shot with an SLR, what you see is what you get in the final picture. When you use a camera with a separate viewfinder, the final image is always going to be off a little bit.
Probably the biggest advantages to an SLR include the fact that the lenses are separate from the camera body so you can interchange any number of them and the fact that they are so adjustable. You can have the camera automatically set settings such as shutter speed, exposure, lens aperture, etc. or you can manual set them yourself. Most point-and-shoots may offer some manual configuration of settings but not to the extent of an SLR. And, even though point-and-shoots can do a very good job of determining the correct settings, often they cant and they yield less than favorable pictures.