Updated Jan. 29, 2024 8:52 p.m. PT

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Geoffrey Morrison

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Geoffrey Morrison Contributor

Geoffrey Morrison is a writer/photographer about tech and travel for CNET, The New York Times, and other web and print publications. He’s also the Editor-at-Large for The Wirecutter. He has written for Sound&Vision magazine, Home Theater magazine, and was the Editor-in-Chief of Home Entertainment magazine. He is NIST and ISF trained, and has a degree in Television/Radio from Ithaca College. His bestselling novel, Undersea, and its sequel, Undersea Atrophia, are available in paperback and digitally on Amazon. He spends most of the year as a digital nomad, living and working while traveling around the world. You can follow his travels at BaldNomad.com and on his YouTube channel.

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Sq. Feet of Lab Space

$110 at Moment

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Get closer to the action

Add-on lenses for your phone


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$249 at Amazon

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For where your phone fears to tread

GoPro Hero 10


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$575 at Walmart

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Pics your smartphone can’t touch

A camera with zoom


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No matter what kind of trip you have planned for this summer, it’s only natural to want to document it to share with friends back home and strangers online. It could be anything from a long road trip, a visit to a National Park or three or a trip to Disney with, or maybe even better, without the kids. 

While camera gear can get expensive, you don’t actually have to spend a lot to greatly improve your photos and videos. Even if you’re just sharing them online, the right settings for your phone or a relatively inexpensive action camera can make a huge difference. I’m a travel photographer and I even end up using my phone sometimes to get a quick shot. The key is knowing how to use the camera, regardless of its price.

Here are a few options at different prices. One of these should fit your trip and budget perfectly.

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Believe it or not, your phone might be all you need. If you know it’s not, feel free to keep reading. Honestly, modern mid- and high-end phones take excellent photos and videos. Or at least, take excellent photos of a certain kind. The majority of phones have fairly wide-angle lenses, so you can take great group shots and landscapes, but that far-off bison is going to look really tiny.

For most people, and in most situations, a phone really is all you’ll need. Get to know a few basics about how it works (tap the screen to change the exposure), and you’ll be good to go. 

If you’ve got an older phone and you’re not happy with the pictures it takes, but you aren’t sure if you want to spend money on a dedicated camera, consider a new phone. I’m partial to Google Pixels myself, but CNET has lots of Android and Apple recommendations.

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Add-on lenses for your phone aren’t a substitute for a real camera, and even in the best case could reduce the quality of the image. They will let you get photos that otherwise wouldn’t be possible with just the phone’s camera and its built-in lenses. A slight reduction in quality, which may or may not be noticeable when posted to social media, could be worth it. 

The idea of these is you mount an additional lens on top of your phone camera. Together they act as if you had an entirely different phone camera.

CNET checked out Moment lenses a few years ago, and their current 58mm telephoto lens is what I’d recommend checking out. This won’t get you quite as close to the action as a “real” telephoto lens, nor does it offer the reach of the telephoto cameras on some highest-end phones. However, it will get you a lot closer to the action than the wide main camera on most phones.

There are wide-angle versions of these add-on lenses, as well. I love a good wide-angle lens, but most phone cameras have a panorama mode that will do the same for free, at least for photos. That method won’t work for videos. If you want an additional lens, go for it, but I think for most people the tele will get you photos not otherwise possible.

Keep in mind, that you’ll also need to get one of Moment’s phone cases to connect the lens.

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The latest GoPro is the Hero 11 Black, but for most people, I still recommend last year’s Hero 10 Black. It’s a little cheaper, but nearly as good as the newer 11. It can record 5.3K video at 60 frames per second, for ultradetailed, ultrasmooth videos. It can also take 23MP pictures. Even better, it’s rugged, easy to use and waterproof to a depth of 33 feet.

There are also an infinite number of mounts and accessories available not just online, but at hotel gift shops, dive centers, electronic stores — really pretty much everywhere. If you lose a battery or want a new mount, they’re easy to find. 

The only downside, other than the price, is its wide-angle lens. You won’t get those cool up-close images of wildlife or anything in the distance. For most adventures this is fine, but going on safari, or hiking where there are lots of cool wild animals, the footage might not be as compelling as if you had a real camera with a zoom. More on those below.

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The GoPro Hero 11 Black’s biggest change over its predecessor is a new, more square, image sensor. This allows you to record higher-resolution vertical videos without turning the camera. The benefit is that you can record everything with the camera in one position, and then while editing, crop vertical for TikTok and Instagram, or crop horizontal for YouTube or more traditional aspect ratios. With previous GoPros you would have to choose the intended orientation before you shot, limiting the quality if you wanted to use the footage in the other orientation.
If this doesn’t make any sense to you, or you don’t care about the video quality when you cross-post between social media platforms that prefer vertical or horizontal, the Hero 10 Black mentioned above is probably fine and will save you a bit of money.

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For certain types of photos, you actually do need a real camera. There’s only so far you can “zoom in” with a standard phone camera. Fortunately, even inexpensive point-and-shoot cameras typically have some amount of optical zoom. 

Optical zoom is what you want; don’t be fooled by any “digital zoom” spec. Digital zoom is not a zoom at all. It’s merely cropping the photo and then scaling it up. You can’t “zoom and enhance” with your device, despite what every movie and TV show would lead you to believe. At least, not with any quality. 

Because cameras overall have become less popular, and more specialized, since the advent of the “cameraphone” there are fewer inexpensive options. Expect to pay somewhere between the cost of a GoPro and a big interchangeable lens camera. Most also shoot video, so you don’t also need a GoPro unless you were specifically doing action-type of sports, anything in or around water — that kind of thing.

I like the Sony ZV-1 as it’s small enough to fit in your pocket, has a reasonable zoom (70mm equivalent), and has a screen that can pivot out so you can see yourself. If you want something with a bit more zoom, the Canon G7X Mark III offers similar features, with a 100mm equivalent lens. There are a lot of options, but if you start considering cameras over $1,000 it’s worth considering an interchangeable lens camera instead.

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If you really want to go all-out, at the top of the camera food chain are interchangeable lens cameras. Historically, these were called SLRs or DSLRs, but increasingly the top-end cameras are what’s called “mirrorless,” in that they lack the mirror found in all SLR/DSLRs. This allows them to be more compact, along with some other features we don’t have space to discuss. Suffice it to say, interchangeable lens mirrorless cameras are the future, DSLRs are on their way out.

The main benefit of both, though, is the ability to use a variety of lenses. Want a superzoom lens that has a wide-angle and telephoto in one package? Lots of options. Want an ultrasharp prime lens? Tons. Want an epic telephoto to see the hair on a llama’s back at 1 mile? Lots of those, too.

Generally, you can think of these cameras in two categories: full frame, and crop. Full frame cameras are called that as their image sensors are the same size as 35mm film. Crop sensors are smaller. The difference, for most people, isn’t huge. There are more lens options and usually better picture quality with full-frame cameras, but they’re also more expensive. For beginners, crop cameras are just fine. I used one professionally for years, though last year I upgraded to a Canon R6 and I’m glad I did. Unless you absolutely know what you’re doing, don’t spend thousands of dollars on any camera. 

At the entry-level end of the spectrum, and since I’m a Canon guy, there’s the EOS Rebel T8i. It takes 24.1MP photos, 4K24 video and has a swing-out screen. More importantly, you’ll have a huge range of lenses available once you learn how to use the camera and figure out what you want. In the meantime, the linked kit comes with two basic lenses, one wide zoom and one telephoto zoom. It also comes with what is almost certainly a bad tripod, some filters and a bunch of questionably useful-in-the-long-term accessories. As a starter pack, it’s great. If this specific kit disappears, there are always a bunch of options on Amazon, look for one that has both the 18-55mm wide zoom and the 75-300mm telephoto kit lenses.

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As well as covering TV and other display tech, Geoff does photo tours of cool museums and locations around the world, including nuclear submarinesmassive aircraft carriersmedieval castles, epic 10,000-mile road trips and more. Check out Tech Treks for all his tours and adventures.

He wrote a bestselling sci-fi novel about city-size submarines and a sequel. You can follow his adventures on Instagram and his YouTube channel.


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