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Cheetah Mounts Plasma LCD Flat Screen TV Articulating Full Motion Dual Arm Wall Mount Bracket For 32-65" Displays Up To 165LBS Black With 10' High Speed HDMI Cable With Ethernet Fits Up To 24" Studs List Price: $189.96 Sale Price: $64.00 |
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This is a very substantial mount with Dual arms and heavy gauge steel. The arms extend over 20" from the wall yet fold to less than 4.25". Even at full extension, this mount has very little sag or twist... |
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VideoSecu Articulating LCD LED TV Wall Mount Full Motion Tilt Swivel Mount Bracket for 22" to 37" Flat Screen with VESA 100 200 Mount Pattern 1XE List Price: $145.99 Sale Price: $19.90 |
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The VideoSecu articulating mount support most mid size flat panels up to 55 lbs (25 kg) with VESA 75x75/100x100/200x100/200x200mm. This is one of the popular medium size TV mount, with heavy duty steel construction... |
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Cheetah Mounts 32"-55" Articulating LCD TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Swing Out Tilt & Swivel Dual Arms for Flat Screen Flat Panel LED Plasma Displays List Price: $249.99 Sale Price: $39.95 Used From: $44.33 |
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This is a solid mount, the wall plate is 17.7" wide, allowing it to be mounted into two standard studs 16" apart. This provides a stable two stud installation for displays in the 32-55" size range. This mount will fit hole patterns up to VESA 400x400 (16"x16")... |
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Sewell Articulating LCD TV Wall Mount Bracket for 37"-60" TV's Sale Price: $39.95 |
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Watch TV anywhere in the room with the Sewell Articulating Wall mount. This mount is constructed with high grade steel and two heavy duty articulating arms capable of securely holding nearly any LCD TV... |
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VideoSecu LCD LED TV Wall Mount Full Motion with Swivel Articulating Arm for 23-37, up to 42 in TV Flat Panel Screen With VESA 200 100, 20 in extension and Post-installation Leveling System A35 List Price: $99.99 Sale Price: $22.90 |
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The VideoSecu articulating mount ML530B is a mounting solution for most 22"-37" midsize flat panels and some models up to 42inch with VESA 100x100/200x200/200x100mm mounting hole patterns. Its 9 lbs heavy gauge steel construction provides safety loading up to 66lbs display... |
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VideoSecu Articulating TV Wall Mount Bracket for VESA 100 LCD LED Flat Screen Monitor TV 1E9 List Price: $83.99 Sale Price: $14.99 Used From: $16.69 |
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The flexible aluminum alloy swing LCD wall mount supports LCD flat screens with VESA 75x75(3"x3") or 100x100(4"x4"). Constructed with 3 lbs of high grade aluminum alloy material, the ML10B mount provides up to 33lbs loading capacity... |
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Long Articulating LCD LED TV Monitor Flat Panel TV Wall Mount, 20 inch Extension 55 lb loading capacity VESA 75mm/100 mm 1US List Price: $69.99 Sale Price: $25.00 Used From: $20.25 |
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The VideoSecu articulating mount ML513B supports VESA 75x75 and 100x100mm LCD LED TV monitor flat panel weighing less than 55 lbs (25 kg). This mount is ideal for anyone requiring a medium heavy duty cantilever mount with advanced features... |
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VideoSecu Articulating Swing Arm LCD LED TV Wall Mount Aluminum Alloy Bracket for VESA 100 Flat Panel Screen TV and Monitors 1EC List Price: $79.99 Sale Price: $15.59 Used From: $14.33 |
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The VideoSecu flexible aluminum alloy swing LCD wall mount supports VESA 75x75(3"x3") or 100x100(4"x4") LCD TV monitor flat panel screen. Constructed with 3 lbs of high grade aluminum alloy material, the silver mount provides up to 33 lbs loading capacity... |
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Cheetah Mounts APSAMB 32-55" LCD TV Wall Mount Bracket with Full Motion Swing Out Tilt & Swivel Articulating Arm for Flat Screen Flat Panel LCD LED Plasma TV and Monitor Displays Includes Free 10' Braided High Speed HDMI Cable With Ethernet List Price: $159.96 Sale Price: $31.90 |
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The APSAM universal articulating arm mount supports virtually any display up to 55-Inch with hole patterns up to 27.7-Inch horizontally and 19-Inch vertically. The APSAM also features a full 27-Inch of extension and up to 150 degrees of rotation for larger displays, it also folds to a low 3... |
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Peerless Articulating Arm 22 - 40 Inches LCD, Black List Price: $219.99 Sale Price: Too low to display |
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The PA740 from Peerless is a versatile mount for your display, letting you position your screen exactly where it needs to be with quick and easy adjustment, and hiding those ugly cables out of the way... |
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Articulating LCD TV Wall Mount/ HDMI Cable $25.99 Get a better picture with the Bentley tilt/swivel articulating LCD TV wall mount. This television mount is designed to fit most 13- to 27-inch flat-panel screens. |
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Mount-It! Articulating 17-37 LED/ LCD TV Wall Mount $23.99 This Mount-It! Articulating LCD/LED TV wall mount supports most 22-inch to 37-inch LCD screens. This wall mount's dual arm design provides easy tilt and up to 180 degrees of swivel. |
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Bently LCM111B+1C Black Tilt/ Swivel Articulating LCD TV Wall Mount $28.99 Put your television exactly where you want it with a wall mount from Bently. This tilt/swivel articulating wall mount is designed for most 13- to 27-inch flat-panel screens that are Vesa 75-100 compatible. |
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Bently LCD-112B Tilt/ Swivel LCD TV Articulating Wall Mount $24.99 Get a better picture with the Bentley tilt/swivel articulating LCD TV wall mount. This television mount is designed to fit most 13- to 27-inch flat-panel screens. |
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Canon Powershot G11 (Paperback) $11.1 - Successor to the best-selling Canon G10, with durable camera body, lots of manual controls, bigger pixels for better low-light photos, an articulated LCD that swings out and swivels 180 degrees for overhead sh... |
Articulating Lcd

Xsi Rebel - The Next/best Thing From Canon
We'll start with what this camera is NOT:
1) It's NOT a full-frame camera. That means it's smaller, lighter, and the resulting 1.6x crop factor is important to remember if you have EF lenses already. But because it's smaller it offers less features making it easier to use at the expense of being slightly less functional. These are, for the most part, obscure features nobody will ever use anyway. Also, because it doesn't have features like 6.5 fps, a pentaprism, and Flash Exposure Bracketing, it is less expensive than the x0D series.
2) The XSi Rebel is NOT a point-and-shoot digicam. Don't expect it to do videos, sound, or to incorporate all kinds of convenient uber-automation. While 'cool', this automation usually just keeps you from controlling what you want to do yourself. Most of the time, this camera will stay in "P" or "program mode" for me. There is a green setting for point-and-shoot operation, but all this does is disable most of the features that you buy the camera for.
2a) Live View is NOT the same as the LCD viewfinder on point-and-shoot digicams. Don't expect it to focus fast or provide the same functionality. Live View is intended for a camera mounted on a tripod or held steady. It is a GREAT way to get perfect focus when you need it. You just zoom in to 10x magnification and manually focus or let the contrast detection do it for you. But, it is NOT an LCD viewfinder. As long as you don't think it will be (I was stupid enough to think that way) then you know before you buy.
The bad: (in all fairness, these are true of most modern DSLR's)
1) The battery is improved, yes, but it's REALLY expensive. I bought a generic battery for a backup. Keeping the Canon battery fully charged, of course, and only using the generic when the Canon is charging.
2) The LCD screen is right where my nose and cheek go. You can't avoid getting the glass all dirty and that gets annoying. And if the S5 can have an articulated 2.5" screen, why can't the XSi Rebel?
3) A cheesy rubber cover. I like that all of the inputs are on the side, but I just hate these cheesy rubber covers. I would prefer a sliding cover or, better yet, use the space next to the SD slot.
4) Battery door on the bottom. On my tripod, I can't access the battery without removing the camera from the tripod. This was also an issue with my first two digital Rebels.
Now, we'll do a reality check:
1) To those who say, "It's only 12mp," they're right. But, understand that unless you're printing bigger than 8x10", this resolution is better than adequate. In fact, the majority of the lenses out there don't have sufficient resolution to go above 12 megapixels. What I mean is that you can have a 100 megapixel camera but your lens is only really pushing out 10mp worth of quality resolution, what's the point? Many point-and-shoots have too much resolution for their lenses. Just try blowing up a typical 10mp p-&-s image to 8x10 and see what you get. Chances are, the 8mp sensor from the Digital Rebel XT did better.
2) Some will say "It feels flimsy." I completely disagree. It feels solid and durable to me. Now, if you don't know this already, the plastic is actually a covering and environmental seal. Underneath, there is a stainless steel frame that holds everything solid. Your strap attaches to the frame directly as does the lens mount, tripod mount, and sensor. The plastic isn't structural so however it might FEEL to you, the camera is, in reality, stronger than you might think. Now, I can understand if you're used to tough magnesium shells that you might be prejudiced against the plastic, however this camera costs hundreds less. One cannot justify criticizing the Rebel series if they aren't willing to pay the extra for the x0D series.
3) Critics say that APS-C is going to be obsolete. That's absurd! Remember that there are now scores of APS-C lenses from Canon, Nikon, Pentax, Sony, Sigma, Tamron, and Tokina and those numbers continue to grow. Further, APS-C cameras are selling like hotcakes without any sign of slowing down. These people are the same ones that kept their Reel-to-Reel players because they were higher quality. Higher quality, yes, but you can't say that CD's aren't going to sell well because reel-to-reel is higher quality.
APS-C is becoming the DSLR equivalent of what 35mm film was. Meanwhile, so-called "full-frame" sensor cameras are going the way of older 6x7 and 645 film cameras. They are limited to professionals and high-end enthusiasts. Why? Film was limited and topped out at resolution long ago. To get higher resolution, you needed bigger film. Not true with digital sensors. APS-C has not maxed out on resolution yet. Smaller sensors haven't even hit their stride. There is no reason sensors cannot hit 20-30 megapixels in an APS-C in the near future, but why? The lenses are still the limiting factor. In fact, it might be true soon that SMALLER will be better. As sensors get better, they can get smaller. It's cheaper to make a four-thirds or APS-C than a full-frame of the same quality level.
Here's where I get to play designer... what does the XSi Rebel need?
1) Articulating LCD. Like I said earlier, if Canon can add the articulating 2.5" screen to their S5 camera for $350 total, why in the world can't they put it on their best-selling DSLR?
2) Sliding door for the inputs. Cheesy rubber covers are not as cool as designers think they are. Why can't Canon just put one environmentally sealed door for the battery, SD card, and all the inputs? And, hey, why not put it on the side so you can access it while the camera is on the tripod?
3) Why all the inputs? Just have one USB slot to connect to the computer, to the TV, and use the same USB port for a DC input?
4) One dial? Why not two? The Pentax K20D allows you instant access to the aperature with one dial, shutter with the other. Cool.
5) Where did FEB go? Flash Exposure Bracketing? They had it on the XTi. Why did they take it away from me?
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