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Konica Revio KD-500Z Digital Camera
A solid fast-shooter that captures high-quality images, the Konica Digital Revio KD-500Z is certain to appeal to anyone who wants big-picture capability in a small package. It's the smallest and slimmest of the 5-megapixel cameras we tested.
When you slide open the lens cover on the KD-500Z, you're greeted by flashing aquamarine LEDs and musical chords. But the KD-500Z offers few features, so don't look for manual exposure settings or selectable ISO equivalencies. The only changeable parameters are four white-balance presets. And the optical viewfinder does not have a focusable diopter
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Sony Cyber-Shot DSC-85
The Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S85 is the company's latest consumer digital camera, a second-generation improvement over its 3-megapixel DSC-S70 model. The DSC-S85 is a black, chubby, value-packed camera that should appeal to business users, upscale families, and others who want great resolution without unnecessary complexity.
The DSC-S85 is equipped with a very sharp, high-speed f-2.0 3X Carl Zeiss lens that macros as close as 1 5/8 inches. Its 4-megapixel CCD translates into a top resolution of 2,272-by-1,704, but there are only two compression levels for JPEG images (fine and standard) plus uncompressed TIFF.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-F707
The gray-and-black Sony Cyber-shot DSC-F707 looks more like a camera mounted on a lens than a lens on a camera. Its good tactile feel, lineup of interesting and even unique features and functions, long battery life, and excellent image quality make the DSC-F707 ($1,000 list) an appealing prosumer digital camera. But it does have a few quirks and engineering oversights that may frustrate sophisticated users.
The DSC-F707 has a top resolution of 2,560 by 1,920 pixels, and it is the only model in our lineup that can shoot in either the normal 4:3 or the 35-mm-like 3:2 aspect ratio. It captures 12-bit color and saves 8-bit JPEGs with two compression levels, uncompressed TIFFs, or GIF animation clips. It can shoot MPEG movie clips and also record audio files with sound. Images are saved to a Sony Memory Stick. Powering the camera is a "smart" lithium ion battery that provides enough juice for over 3 hours of shooting on a single charge
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-F717
The Sony รก (alpha) DSLR-A100 Digital Camera is a top-quality 10 megapixel Digital SLR Camera that builds on a two-decade legacy of Minolta photographic leadership. It accepts all Minolta A-mount
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Sony Cybershot DSC-H1
Get closer than ever with the Sony Cybershot DSC-H1 digital camera from Sony. With its incredible 12X optical zoom lens combined with the Super SteadyShot optical image stabilization system you can
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P100
The good: Stylish and small; fast start-up and operation; adjustable flash output; AF illuminator; 30fps, VGA-resolution video and audio capture.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P20
Sony is famous for creating sleek and sexy products, but the Cyber-shot DSC-P20 ($190 street) is not one of them. The blue-and-gray plastic DSC-P20 is, in fact, a brick of a camera. But this little 1.3-megapixel powerhouse does have lots of great options.
The fixed focal length lens and tiny LCD viewfinder are parsimonious, as is the 4MB Memory Stick. You can capture images in black and white or sepia, and you can shoot at night. Image-storage formats include TIFF. The Cyber-shot P20 can also capture video (but without sound).
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P200
The modernist shape of the Cyber-shot DSC-P200 ($399.95 direct) certainly sets it apart in the compact cameras category. With its one rounded side and minimal yet formally balanced front, it will definitely draw attention. And as with past P-series models, Sony hasn't skimped on performance, either. But although the DSC-P200 performed similarly on our lab tests to the Canon PowerShot SD500 Digital Elph and is $100 cheaper, it doesn't match the SD500 in subjective image quality.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P51
Two new Sony cameras share the futuristic shape that the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P1 originated: the slightly smaller Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P7 and the larger DSC-P51. The design is neat but feels out of balance, as the lens is very close to the side of the camera. When shooting vertically using the viewfinder, it's easy to get part of your palm in the picture. Grip these guys with two hands.
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Sony Cyber-shot DSC-P7
The DSC-P7 has a 3.2-megapixel image sensor and 3x optical zoom, equivalent to 39- to 117-mm lens on a 35-mm camera, and uses one rechargeable Infolithium battery. It can shoot in three video modes plus full-sound mpegs, limited only by the size of the memory. We found these features very useful.
The DSC-P7 had excellent tested resolution scores, but print quality from the camera was mixed. Its auto and manual white-balance results were top-notch, but our jury placed its images more towards the middle of the pack.
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