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	Yes, the best point-and-shoots nowadays have very equal quality to  most DSLRs, the main differences are speed (shooting anything that  moves) and the ability to change lenses for different purposes. The  Nikon kit lenses such as the 18-55 VR are excellent for 80% of anyone's  outdoor shots, portraits, closeups, etc. and will produce professional  quality photos. The lens is useless indoors though, and the 35mm f/1.8  is for that, and even better for portraits etc. If you need a telephoto  for shooting sports or birds or your neighbor in the shower, go for it,  but pretty much everything else can be covered with the 2 lenses I  mentioned. At least for me, the point of a DSLR is to have a versatile  camera that can do anything, not to lug around dozens of lenses just  because I can. If the kit lens does a great job I see no reason to not  use it out of some principle. The OP asked for a package of $600 to  start photography with, a single "prime lens" easily costs that alone.
		
			
			
				
					  Originally Posted by pocketfours   Reality check.
 The main reason for buying an SLR is that you get to use different  lenses, filters and external flashes etc. If you aren't going to get  into that (like most people who buy an SLR), then what you have is a  very bulky and expensive point and shoot.
 
 With a kit zoom lens the quality isn't significantly better than what  you get with a good point and shoot. Prime lenses is the way to go  anyway imo.
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