I bought a Olympus 2020Z digital camera three years ago when the list price was $1,000.
Paid $625 for it over the net.
It's 2.1 megapixels: 1600 X 1200 pixels within the Charge Coupling Device (CCD).
It produces first-rate images up to 8X10 size. That's fine by me, because my home printer doesn't print larger than about 8X14. I've never had occasion to make a print larger than 8X10 inches.
People get too wrapped up in megapixels. More than 2 megapixels is great if you're going to print larger than 8X10 but for most family use, images won't ever be printed larger than 4X6.
Of greater concern is the optics of the camera itself. Some cheaper digital cameras advertising high megapixels have sub-standard lenses. It doesn't matter how many pixels you have, if your lens is made with lousy glass.
I am a photographer for Uncle Sam and regularly use a professional-grade Kodak 760 digital camera. The body alone on this camera cost about $8,000. It's a 6 megapixel camera capable of producing prints up to poster sized. It's a great camera but heavy at about 4 pounds, without flash.
In my jacket pocket I carry my little Olympus 2020Z. I don't always have my Kodak 760 camera and bag with me, but the little Olympus ensures that I always have some kind of camera with me.
In the next few years I'll likely get another Olympus with more pixels. The price on good, digital cameras is plummeting weekly, it seems.
I bought the Olympus 2020Z for many reasons:
1. Good optical zoom. Digital zoom is of dubious value.
2. Small and lightweight. It looks like a cheap point-and-shoot 35mm, which doesn't draw a lot of attention from the public and the ever-present thief.
3. Image quality is exceptional. In fact, in various tests published just before I bought it, the Olympus 2020Z was rated slightly above the Nikon Coolpix. Magazines and testers reported it had slightly better color accuracy and resolution than the Nikon Coolpix of the time.
4. It takes AA batteries. I was in Mexico a month ago when my NiMH batteries unexpectedly died. I walked into a drug store and bought four AA cameras and kept shooting. Try doing THAT in a foreign country with a camera that requires specialized batteries.
5. Wide range of capabilities: shutter priority, aperture priority, choice of color, black and white or sepia, remote control, timer, zoom on the LCD so I can zoom in on an image to determine whether it's focused (most LCDs really can't tell you if an image is slightly out of focus, unless you can zoom in), capable of taking a separate flash if need be (I haven't had the need to get one) and so on. It has far more features than I normally use, but it's nice to have them.
6. Capable of taking cards up to 128 MB. I recently bought a 128 MB flash media card at Costco for $45. However, I normally use 16 MB cards.
I dislike putting all my images from an entire vacation or trip on one card; I've had too many cards crap out on me to ever trust an entire event to one card.
A 16 MB card will give me about 35 images, at the highest resolution, so it's about like having a 36-exposure roll of film. I carry numerous cards with me, in case one is damaged or gets corrupted.
Ewa-Marine makes a waterproof housing for my 2020Z, so I can use it underwater to about 30 feet or take it fishing with and not worry about damage. It's about $150 for the heavy, vinyl bag but it will probably be my next purchase. I'm sure that Ewa-Marine makes a similar bag for your camera too. It would be a good thing to have out duck hunting or in dusty environments.
You have a very good camera in that Olympus. Take care of it and it will last you for years.
Don't get in a rush to buy the newest digital down the pike. A favorite expression among professional digital photographers today is, "If you can buy it. It's obsolete."
My Olympus may be obsolete, but it's far from useless.