Digital Camera!
You need to expand your question a bit more. Are you asking about the differences between digital vs. film? That question is being answered in other threads. OR.... Are you asking if you can convert a film camera to digital? The answer to that is yes, sometimes. Personally I would not recommend it, just go buy a digital camera.
I prefer film cameras to digital cameras. The pictures look better.
The digital camera has replaced the old tradition where photographs were just pasted on a cardboard and kept for cherishing the memories
Steven Sasson is 60 years old.To find out more go to who invented the digital camera.
I am not sure if you are asking about a digital camera or a old style camera. If you want a good older camera that would be a Cannon as you can set the shutter speed on it. If you are talking about a digital camera then you should hold the shutter button down longer.
You would have to use a Minolta SLR digital camera with a Minolta lens. However, don't automatically assume an old Minolta lens will work on a digital camera. You need to determine whether the digital camera accepts interchangeable lenses and whether it accepts the specific Minolta SLR lens and mount you have. There is no real generic answer to this question.
Canon a710 is a bit old digital camera that's why you could not find it in stock. Besides, I recommend you to see amazon and ritz camera.
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There are some Kodak cameras that are meant for children and are durable.
Well, my "old" Pentax K1000 will take a maximum of 36 images on a roll of 35mm film. A half-frame 35 mm (no longer manufactured) will do 72 to a roll. My Pentax K10D digital will put a maximum of about 600 on a 4 GB SD card at the highest resolution, and well over 4000 at lowest. As far as which makes the better images, that's a matter of the brain behind the camera, not the one inside.
Digital cameras are fun and convenient, and offer the instant gratification we all got from the old Polaroid cameras. And you can have digital photos printed at any camera store, one hour photo place or even at Target, and have real prints you can give all your friends. OTOH...if the picture you are taking is going to wind up on the side of a 24-foot utility van, using a digital camera will lead to you having pixels the size of a dime.
Your best bet, long-term, is to find someone with an Digital-8mm camera. Take all of your 8 mm films and convert them to digital. Burn them onto DVDs and you will have them for life!