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Monday, December 29, 2008

Olympus SP-570 UZ digital camera

How does this super zoom perform?



Some super zooms look a little uncomfortable in their shells – a fusion of huge lens body stuck on an otherwise fairly compact camera. The Olympus takes a slightly more macho approach, looking more like a compact SLR than some of its competitors, see for example, the Nikon P80 or Fujifilm’s FinePix S8100fd, both recently reviewed here on Pocket-lint. The Olympus SP-570 UZ, however, brings a mite more zoom to the party.

The camera is fairly well laid-out, giving you access to a huge number of options, both via hard buttons and through the menus. The back is dominated by a very good, crisp, 2.7in LCD screen, the normal round four-way and enter buttons, plus options for reviewing images, shadow adjustment, display and menus, and an AE and AF lock option, hinting at some of the more advanced features on offer.

Main mode controls, however, are handled by one of the dials on the top, which sits atop the main power switch. There is also a second dial on the top (which we will come back to later) and a conveniently placed exposure compensation button. Main modes accessed through the dial include a full auto mode; programme which handles aperture and shutter speed for you (P); aperture priority (A); shutter priority (S); full manual (M); My Mode, scene, guide, video capture and image review – a fair number of options.

The Guide is somewhat strange is it gives you basic operation guidelines, but does allow you to activate some of those options directly, which is great for novices. However, it might be a little difficult to get stuck as there are a huge number of scene modes you can select, from the normal landscape and portrait modes, right through to auction, behind glass, snow, beach and so on. All these scenes might make the SP-570 UZ appeal to the less experienced photographer.

Of course, those who know what they want to achieve, or more advanced users, can opt for the other modes, P, A, S, M and My Mode. These advanced modes begin to make use of the additional dial on the top, which will flick through settings without having to move your thumb down to the back controls, which makes it comfortable to use.

My Mode allows users to define their own settings and store four original modes of their own, which will be handy for those who want to take shots of a particular type which are not already catered for; the process is simple too and can include things like flash settings as well.

The flash is a manual pop-up option, and although you’ll be alerted to the need for flash on the display, you’ll have to press the button yourself. There are a range of flash options, including various types of red-eye prevention. For those looking to get more from a flash, there is a standard hot shoe plate on the top.

Besides the LCD on the rear there is an electronic viewfinder, with a dioptre adjuster. Switching to the EVF is via another button on the back of the camera, which switches off the LCD (except for image preview). As is often the case, the EVF doesn’t really give you a very good image and suffers when compared to the sort of image you’d get from a TTL SLR.

So moving to the 20x optical zoom: this is motor driven and controlled via the ring around the lens. It can be a little slow to respond whilst moving from the wider angle and into the zoom as the hardware moves around inside. You get a 26-520mm (equiv.), so not terrifically wide-angle, but an impressive range none the less. There is an additional digital zoom, which you’d hope would be unnecessary, and unless you have a tripod, a stationary subject and perfect conditions, is not worth enabling.

Of course, even at the far end of the optical zoom, camera shake is an issue, so it needs to be very well supported. The camera does feature dual image stabilisation, which will aid in reducing blur, but the more you zoom, the greater the effect it is trying to counter: the image stabilisation is better put to task capturing images with lower ISOs.

ISO seems to be something of a yoyo factor and you’ll often find that the ISO is boosted to capture the image you want, which may result in the quality dropping off as noise becomes more apparent. At higher ISOs the sensor drops down to less pixels too to try to keep things under control, but noise is still apparent, so controlling the ISO through the settings is preferable to accepting that which the scene selection might give you.

Back to the lens and we found performance reasonable across a range of situations, if you control the shake then you’ll get good images towards the far end of the zoom, although dark corners do start to appear in brighter conditions. At the wide angle there is noticeable barrel distortion which can be seen on the LCD viewfinder, but you’d expect to find these things on this type of set-up.

Certainly, the zoom offers you a range of options that you simply don’t get on other types of camera, not from your compact and not without investing in more lenses for your SLR.

At times, bright conditions can be a little overwhelming resulting in a lack of detail in highlights or a leaching of colours. There is also evidence of chromatic aberration resulting in softer images which don’t have the sharp detail you might be looking for. Colours can be well represented, but we found as the light dropped, the colours tended to become too vivid, out of balance with surroundings.

But there is also a whole host of technology packed into the SP-570 UZ, such as face detection and a smile shot option. You can also capture images at 13fps (but only at 3MP) and there are some neat multi-shot options so you can get the exact frame of action you want. The latter of these options becomes something of a necessity because the shooting cycle can feel a little slow, especially compared to an SLR, but are also great fun to play back, watching changing expressions and so on.

There is also an intelligent panoramic option which is a breeze to use, but you do need an Olympus xD-Picture Card to take advantage of this. Arguably this is also one of the shortcomings of this camera – the reliance of the xD-Picture Card over the dominant SD/SDHC format (although this looks set to change in their cameras for the future). Olympus do themselves no favours by not supplying a card in the box either.

Battery life is also something of an issue. The camera takes four AA batteries, housed in the right-hand grip, and we found that we only got around 200 shots from full rechargables (2500mAh) and this was almost all without flash. This is an obvious disadvantage of a powered zoom so access to rechargables is a must – at least AA batteries are easy to get hold of.

Verdict

With so many features on offer, it is impossible to cover all of them without rewriting the manual. The Olympus SP-570 UZ looks good, feels good in the hand and build quality is impressive. But with every super zoom camera compromises have to be made. This arrangement will let you capture images that you might otherwise miss and with good light in the middle-zoom ranges you can get some great shots. However, at the price being asked for, you can find cheaper alternatives in the super zoom category.

Super zooms often appeal to those who want to get close to the action for holiday photos, on safari, for example, but if yourself wanting a zoom on a regular basis, then stepping up to a DSLR model will get you better results, albeit at additional cost.

-pocket-lint

Sunday, November 30, 2008

Canon PowerShot SD1100 IS, Holiday Gift Guide 2008



Holiday Gift Guide 2008: The best digital cameras under $200


Okay, let’s get real. A lot of us are just not going to be ready, willing or able to plunk down $500 on a digital camera this holiday season, no matter how much we adore our gift recipients. So for the rest of us, here’s a list of my favorite digital cameras for under $200.

Canon PowerShot SD1100 ISCanon PowerShot SD1100 IS
I’ve always been a big fan of Canon’s Digital Elph point-and-shoots and though this isn’t my favorite of the Canon models, it’s hard to beat the SD1100 IS’s image quality at this price. It’s an 8.3-megapixel model and serves up a 3x optical zoom lens (38-114mm equivalent f/2.8-4.9), optical image stabilization (as with all the Canons that include IS in their names), face detection, an optical viewfinder, and a 2.5-inch LCD.

The SD 1100 IS can detect up to nine faces in a scene and use them to set exposure and focus. It uses face detection to remove red-eye automatically as you’re shooting and to calculate white balance for better skin tones. It can even let you choose a specific face in a scene to track as it moves around the scene you’re shooting. Canon’s Motion Detection Technology also uses face detection to determine if your subject is moving and adjusts settings to prevent motion blur.

Top that with relatively fast performance and minimal shutter lag (not to mention five metallic colors to choose from) and you’ve got a super deal that anyone would be pleased to find under the tree.

Janice Chen Zdnet

Friday, September 19, 2008

Samsung reveals NV24HD digital camera




What do you call a digital camera that's neither an SLR nor a superzoom nor an "ultraslim" compact? For lack of a sexier term, we've settled on standard compact. That makes these cameras sound like photography's version of the sensible sedan, but in fact this is the biggest category in cameras, spanning everything from $50 bubble-pack specials to the sophisticated models here, this year's top choices.

Smaller than superzoom compacts, standard compacts accommodate more features and overall imaging power than their ultraslim cousins. Some even accept accessories from their makers' D-SLR systems, such as hotshoe-mount flashes and off-camera TTL cords. Standard compacts are also usually more comfortable to hold than ultraslims, and unlike the latter they often still have optical finders -- allowing eye-level viewing for steadier shooting than is possible with now-familiar arms-length LCD-screen composition. Last but not least, because they aren't trying so hard to stay small or achieve superzoom-level magnification, standard compacts are often less expensive than other kinds of point-and-shoots with otherwise comparable features.

If there's anything more useful in a compact camera than having a 28mm-equivalent focal length, it's having a 24mm-equivalent focal length -- at least if you're photographing the city, a wide-open landscape, or in a small interior. Twenty-four millimeters is where the Samsung NV24's lens starts zooming, ending up at the equivalent of 86.5mm -- a moderate tele focal length long enough to minimize apparent distortion in tight portraits.

If that snug interior you're shooting is dimly lit, you're also in good shape. At 24mm, the NV24's zoom has a maximum aperture of f/2.8, which along with the NV24's lens-based image stabilization and top sensitivity of ISO 3200 helps minimize blur. (The lens slows to a not-so-bright f/5.7 at the long end.) For videos of spaces wide or claustrophobic you have the option of 1,280 x 720 pixels at 30fps, with high-definition 720p HDMI output to an HDTV through an accessory cradle (about $50). And if your HDTV happens to be a new Samsung model, you can navigate through the camera menus using the television's remote control.

The Samsung NV24's viewing screen is probably the first on your block -- an active-matrix organic LED (AM-OLED) rather than a conventional LCD. AM-OLEDs have a wider color gamut and faster "redraw" (the speed at which image-forming elements actually change), and can be made thinner too. The buzz among videophiles is that the flat-screen TVs of the future will be OLEDs. (Samsung is already showing some OLED TV prototypes.) Adding to the multimedia savvy of the NV24 is a Multi-Slide Show mode that lets you create transitions in-camera.

The array of buttons along two sides of the NV24's screen may seem intimidating at first, but they actually make settings simpler and faster by reducing the amount of menu-scrolling you have to do. One pushbutton mode is Self Portrait, in which the shutter won't fire unless a subject is in the center of the frame. That may not be the best composition, but at least you won't crop off your own head.

-infibeam

Saturday, August 9, 2008

The toughest digital camera on the market?



I've seen many a digital camera die a slow and painful death while on the road. Sand that got caught in the lens mechanism. LCD screens cracked by bumper-car-joyrides. Accidental drops on unforgiving pavement. Not to mention those of us who abuse our cameras in adverse situations involving water, dust and extremes of temperature.

For anyone who's ever risked their digital to get a great shot but lost a nice camera in the process, I recommend checking out the Olympus Stylus 1030SW. According to the reviews I've found at Travel Gear Blog, as well as on CNET, the 1030W is one of the sturdiest cameras on the market. In addition to being waterproof and dustproof, the Olympus is also shockproof, crushproof and freezeproof down to 14 degrees Fahrenheit.

How durable is that exactly? According to specs, you can drop it from up to 6.6 feet and crush it with up to 220 pounds of pressure. While the 1030 SW can't match the optics of some of the top-of-the-line point-and-shoots out there, it does offer a solid 10.1 megapixels and the standard digital camera features like panorama stitching and image stabilization we've come to expect from most consumer point-and-shoots these days.

All you skiiers, snorkelers and adventure-travelers take note. Although there are better cameras on the market for image quality, this Olympus packs some great features into a highly durable package. Sometimes avoiding the aggravation of a ruined camera is worth that small sacrifice in functionality.


-Jeremy Kressmann

Thursday, June 26, 2008

Best Middle Size Digital Camera


Imaging Resource Picks section. They're well known for their exhaustive testing of digital cameras. They investigate various aspects of each digital camera to help you pick the best one for your needs. But they know that sometimes you just want someone with experience to tell you which digital camera to buy. To serve that need, they've revamped their Picks to get straight to the point, listing your top digital camera choices by category.


Best Middle Size Digital Camera



Canon PowerShot G9

12.1 megapixels, 6.00x zoom
$474.36



Canon updates a classic "enthusiast" model, delivers a real winner! Sometimes, you just don't have the space or patience to lug along your SLR and several lenses, but still want good image quality, and plenty of manual control and flexibility to let your creativity express itself. That's where a camera like the Canon G9 comes in. The Canon G9 is the latest in one of the most famous product lines in the digicam industry, stretching all the way back to the original G1 first introduced in the Fall of 2000. The most recent G7 model drifted from its enthusiast-oriented roots a little bit, dropping RAW file capability, but that's been restored in the new G9. Old G-series fans will miss the original swivel-screen, but the big, bright 3" LCD on the G9 may console them a little. What most impressed us about the Canon PowerShot G9 though, was its image quality: Great color with loads of resolution. Like many high-megapixel cameras these days, it suffers a little from image noise at low ISO settings, but its important to keep in perspective just how fine-grained that noise will be at any reasonable print size. We found that even ISO 400 & 800 shots made surprisingly decent-looking 8x10 inch prints. Talk about detail: Who'd have imagined being able to make great-looking 16x20 prints from a "pocket" digital camera even a few years ago?


Panasonic Lumix DMC-LX2
10.2 megapixels, 4.00x zoom
$388.11



A widescreen digicam with broad appeal. The Panasonic Lumix LX2, like its predecessor the LX1, is clearly inspired by the surging popularity of widescreen (16:9) televisions. Employing a unique set of "triple-wide" features, the Lumix LX2 combines a 28mm wide-angle Leica lens, a 16:9 wide CCD, and a 16:9 wide LCD. If you're the type who likes to count pixels, the DMC-LX2 has a 10 megapixel CCD that uses the full resolution of the sensor when shooting at 16:9. The Panasonic LX2 now has a 2.8-inch LCD that lets you see the entire wide-angle shot on the screen without letterboxing. (The LX1 had a 2.5-inch display which letterboxed 16:9 shots.) Other improvements include Panasonic's new LSI Venus Engine III image processor which is designed to lower noise at higher ISOs, and a new Intelligent ISO Control (I.I.C.) system which detects subject movement and automatically adjusts ISO and shutter speed to suit the lighting conditions. Even without these changes, there a lot to talk about with the Lumix LX2 including many impressive manual options and Panasonic's tried-and-true MEGA O.I.S. (Optical Image Stabilizer)


Canon PowerShot A720 IS
8.0 megapixels, 6.00x zoom
$197.06



A capable all-around digital camera with high-end features at a great price Canon seems to offer a digital camera for every kind of customer, and the Canon A720 IS was made for those who want all the performance at a low price. With an 8-megapixel sensor, a 6x zoom, optical image stabilization, face detection, high ISO, and both a 2.5-inch LCD and an optical viewfinder, the Canon A720 IS has just about everything. Minor compromises are the low-resolution LCD and a slow flash-recharge cycle. The Canon A720's excellence is in the lens: While it's a 6x zoom, it is impressively sharp in the corners, and chromatic aberration is kept relatively low. As a result low ISO images from the Canon A720 print well at 13x19 inches, and even ISO 1,600 shots are usable at 4x6. Good shot-to-shot times and good shutter lag numbers mean that the Canon A720 will be a good no-nonsense digital camera for kids and pets, one that will double as a good video camera with 640x480 recording at 30fps.

Thursday, June 19, 2008

Best Consumer SLR Digital Camera


Imaging Resource Picks section. They're well known for their exhaustive testing of digital cameras. They investigate various aspects of each digital camera to help you pick the best one for your needs. But they know that sometimes you just want someone with experience to tell you which digital camera to buy. To serve that need, they've revamped their Picks to get straight to the point, listing your top digital camera choices by category.


Best Consumer SLR Digital Camera



Nikon D40
6.1 megapixels, 3.00x zoom
$494.78



A surprisingly excellent SLR that will take the market by storm We've been pleasantly surprised with the Nikon D40's excellent performance in low light and its simple grace as a day-to-day shooter. The Nikon D40 is a natural fit in most hands. Its controls are where they should be for easy use, and the D40 is a well-behaved guest at parties with its soft shutter sound. A big, bright LCD is great for reviewing photos from a wide variety of angles. The Nikon D40's low light performance at ISO 1,600 is startling, even without noise reduction turned on. It's so good that we don't really feel like we're pushing the D40 until we jump into ISO 3,200. The Nikon D40 stands up well against the competition -- even those with higher resolution -- with great image quality at all speeds, and near-perfect utility as a family camera. It's tough to ask for more. The Nikon D40 lives up to our expectations, and even exceeds them.


Canon EOS 400D Rebel XTi

10.1 megapixels, 3.00x zoom
$620.64



Seriously excellent digital SLR with improved autofocus and a three-stage anti-dust system My first experience with the Canon Digital Rebel XTi was positive. It offers more of what you'd seek from a higher-end camera like the Canon EOS 30D at a much lower price. It's also smaller and easier to bring along, which is no small consideration when you want quality pictures on vacation. It can't quite reach to the EOS 30D's ISO 3,200 mode (it's limited to ISO 1600), nor does it have the benefit of 1/8,000 second shutter speed (it's limited to 1/4,000). But the Rebel XTi has something no other EOS has: automatic dust removal and abatement technology, plus a way to digitally subtract dust when a more thorough manual cleaning isn't possible. This important technology will doubtless make it into other EOS cameras, but for now the Canon Rebel XTi is the only self-dusting digital SLR available from Canon. From what I've seen the Canon Digital Rebel XTi will be an excellent take-anywhere all-purpose digital SLR, and will now better serve as a second camera for owners of Rebel XT, 20D, 30D, and 5D cameras who want to keep a second body with a different focal length strapped around their neck. More pixels, a bigger LCD, and dust reduction are great, but faster AF is the true benefit to the Rebel XTi


Olympus EVOLT E-510
10.0 megapixels, 3.00x zoom
$656.53



The E-510 is a well-rounded SLR with more than a few tricks up its sleeve With just the right combination of features and a mature set of lenses, the Olympus E-510 gives the Four-Thirds system a strong contender in the ongoing battle of the digital SLRs. No longer trying to forge new body shapes, Olympus has crafted the E-510 to fit the hand well and lead the pack with innovative features. While matching the competition's standard specs of a 10 megapixel sensor, 2.5 inch LCD, and 3.1 frames per second, they've included their second generation Live View technology and sweetened the deal with sensor-shift image stabilization. As the Olympus E-410 wooed us with is svelte figure, the E-510 set about making better quality images and proving itself a fit rival for a place in your bag. As with all cameras, there are a few issues, but we were most impressed with the Olympus E-510's edge-to-edge image sharpness, thanks to the good quality kit lens; and its high ISO shots fared well against larger sensor designs. Live View, for its part, can easily be misunderstood, but its virtues are worth discovering, and make the E-510 a compelling choice for the creative photographer



Thursday, June 12, 2008

Best Family Digital Camera

Imaging Resource Picks section. They're well known for their exhaustive testing of digital cameras. They investigate various aspects of each digital camera to help you pick the best one for your needs. But they know that sometimes you just want someone with experience to tell you which digital camera to buy. To serve that need, they've revamped their Picks to get straight to the point, listing your top digital camera choices by category.


Best Family Digital Camera

Canon PowerShot S3 IS

6.0 megapixels, 12.00x zoom
$307.01



Canon's flagship long zoom digicam gets better and better Offering a complete range of auto and manual exposure controls, the Canon PowerShot S3 IS is equally suited for novice users and experienced amateurs alike, with a big image-stabilized zoom for getting the shot no matter the situation. The Canon S3 IS's Auto mode keeps things simple for novices, while the manual settings offer the opportunity to take more control when you need it. Its 6.0-megapixel CCD captures high quality images, quite suitable for printing as large as 8x10-inches with good detail, and the increased sensitivity to ISO 800 with image stabilization is a better attack on red-eye than using the flash in red-eye reduction mode. The design is reasonably compact given the increased magnifying power of the 12x optical zoom lens, and the camera should fit in a larger coat pocket or be comfortable when using the neckstrap. The Canon S3 IS reaches beyond the normal limits by offering not only a long-ratio zoom lens, but a very effective image-stabilization system as well, that makes the long lens much more usable than it would be otherwise. Even at wide angle, image stabilization can help capture available light images without blur as low as 1/4 second shutter speeds. The Canon S3 IS also offers a movie mode capable of nonstop recording to the limits of the memory card's capacity, even at 640x480 resolution and a 30 frame/second frame rate. The PowerShot S3 IS is priced competitively, but its features and capabilities set it apart from the myriad camera choices in its price range, so the price will drop only slowly. If you're looking for a long-zoom camera with image stabilization that captures excellent photos and videos, the PowerShot S3 IS looks like a great choce.


Sony Cyber-shot DSC-H3
8.0 megapixels, 10.00x zoom
$271.51



Packed with features, the Sony H3 has a fast shutter, a long zoom, and turns out great 13x19-inch prints Sony has developed a knack for packing a lot of high-end value in the entry-level model of each of their digital camera lines. In the long-zoom H-Series, the Sony H3 continues that trend with a 10x optical zoom, Advanced Sports mode, a Bionz processor, face detection technology, High ISO, Super SteadyShot, in-camera editing, and HD output signal. Gone is the electronic viewfinder found on the other H-series digital cameras, and the Sony H3's LCD has shrunk from 3.0 to 2.5 inches. That, along with a move to lithium-ion power from AA power, makes the Sony Cyber-shot H3 a much smaller camera. The real appeal of the Sony H3, though, is its image output quality: ISO 100 shots look great at 13x19, and even ISO 400 shots look good at 11x14. A good candidate as the enthusiast's second camera, the Sony H3's fast shutter, 10x zoom, and image stabilization make it a great digital camera for anyone looking for a little more quality in a small, long zoom package