If you are referring to Image Stabilization (IS), this allows a reduction in camera shake and blur when shooting shots with a handheld camera.
Using a handheld camera will result in a picture that is noticeably shaky when compared to those shot with professional equipment. While this may be an undesired effect in many shots there are times (such as when shooting an action sequence) when the motion can enhance the viewing experience.
the first camera ever that is handheld is called camera obscura
It's sort of a loaded question. You can't really compare a handheld digital camera from 2000 to a recent professional DSLR camera.
Handheld camera also known as Cinema Verite
The best features of a hot shoe camera for professional photography include compatibility with external flash units, ability to connect to other accessories like microphones or GPS units, and support for advanced shooting modes such as manual control and high-speed continuous shooting.
The first camera was designed like a gun, with the lens capturing the action fitted in the muzzle. The camera's handler had to hold the camera like a gun to capture the image. It's been called shooting since.
Yes, it is a professional camera.
George Eastman was the first person to make the handheld Kodak camera.
I have. The camera is worth its great price. It can take amazing footage for just a small handheld camera. I use it to create a lot of videos. The internal sound recorder is also very good for a handheld camera. The video is great hd quality and i highly reccommend you in purchasing it over many other cameras.
The first modern handheld camera the public could use (called the brownie) was developed by George Eastman, an American.
Depends what camera you have, and what you have the camera set to. Shooting in RAW on my camera, each photo is between 20 and 25MB. Shooting in JPEG you would be able to take a lot more. In small mode on my camera a photo will be about 1 MB. You be best off buying a much bigger memory card, maybe 2 GB if you won't be shooting a lot of photo's. I use a 2 GB and an 8 GB, just to make sure I have enough room when shooting gigs.