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Kodak Easyshare One Digital Camera Review |
Finally after hearing so much about this camera we got our hands on one (pardon
the pun!) to put it to the test.
On opening the boxes and removing the camera for the first time I was surprised
at the weight and size of the camera. After reading and viewing online news
releases, having it your hands is a totally different story.
The camera is a little larger than I thought it would be, but at the end of the
day it has a 230,000 pixel 3-inch (7.6cm) touch screen LCD which flips out left
180 degrees and can rotate again over the top 180 degrees. The screen can also
stay flush against the camera’s back to take photos or flip over to have the LCD
closed away safely against the body of the camera when not in use. Clever design.
The EasyShare One also comes complete with a built in, but detachable ‘stylus’ for
making menu selections as you would on a ‘Blackberry’ unit. This is very handy
little tool and will be very much appreciated by those already using a palm pilot
for day-to-day notes. The stylus is just an option to standard menu navigating but
a very easy one once you get the hang of it.
The back of the camera has just a handful of the general navigation options such
as tele-zoom button, a share button, menu and delete.
There are a ½ dozen buttons on the back of the camera to the right of the LCD for
the main functions but it’s not until you pull out the stylus that you get deeper
into the camera’s main controls – and might I add move through them pretty quickly
and effortlessly with Kodak’s well thought out and simple navigation menu options.
The stylus is quite novel and one which I expect other manufacturers to follow suit.
It is a logical step considering the way technology is lending itself from one new
device to another – and I don’t necessarily mean just cameras. New innovations on a
mobile phones can quite often be found built into a camera, or palm pilot, or even
mp3 player 12 months after its announcement, and all vice versa. Who knows, may be
this time next year Kodak may produce the ‘EasyShare Two’ where you flip out the
screen and chat to some one… built in mobile capabilities. This is only a guess so
don’t get excited – unless Kodak does read this and use the idea! Although hey,
I have a Samsung mobile phone which does just that already…
Anyway, there is more to talk about. Kodak’s design process seems to be one of just
simplifying processes; a stylus for quick menu browsing, ability to send images from
almost anywhere in the world (via 20,000+ hot spots around the globe), print pictures
straight from the camera to a Kodak printer in the same room (without plugs or wires)
and plenty of ‘auto’ shooting options – so you can spend more time with composition
and less time with changing settings to suit a scene.
If you’re looking for a viewfinder on this camera there isn’t one, because at the end
of the day there’s no room left with a 3 inch LCD screen.
Start-up on the camera was a surprise at around 7-8 seconds which is a fair way
behind most other cameras on the market vying for an almost instantaneous start-up.
However once it’s started it is very efficient and recycles the flash quickly
between shots, which is probably more important. This may also explain why Kodak
have included a second battery with the kit, as fast recycling of the flash and 3
inch screen combined would be expected to draw a lot of power.
The images captured on the 4MP sensor are sharp through the 3x Schneider Kreuznach
optical zoom lens and produce good even skin tones in portraits. There was pretty
much no camera shutter lag, but plenty of flexibility with the zoom offering a
useful range of 36-108mm (35mm equivalent). To also make life easy, there are up
to 16 scene modes which pretty much cover every happy snappers photographic situation.
The camera offers also a range of ISO settings from 80 to just 400. The colour
reproduction in general was quite natural with a good response under fluorescent, ambient
and regular day light. There is a 4:3 option for capturing images in the tradition
4x6 inch size and a hefty 256MB internal memory which easily outstrips its
competition – and likely to be copied quickly by new releases with other companies.
This camera also has a movie mode with just one size selection 640x480 pixel, 24fps
MPEG-4. I think it’s pointless offering different sized modes – just offering the
largest every time is how it should be. And if I hear anyone complain about the video
option on their camera not cutting it, then I say go buy a video camera! and use the
right tool for the right job. My belief, until compact cameras reach a hi-res
standard for video, the movie option is just for capturing quick memories – and the
Easyshare One does just that function, easily.
The software included with the camera is quite good and use a little over 60MB of
space for installation. For those looking for an easy introduction to the world of
digital cameras and computers, the EasyShare software is very user-friendly and
trouble-free way of automatically uploading images and clearing them from the
camera’s memory. And if you’re a little internet savvy you can easily upload and
share your images online at kodakgallery.com
Its also worth mentioning that the Kodak Easyshare software works twice as quick as
Windows XP Picture & Fax Viewer, which many people use for general browsing of digital
images, with the Easyshare software also being free for download from the Kodak website
even if you don’t have a Kodak digital camera.
Finally, like the all EasyShare cameras from Kodak, this EasyShare One too comes
with a camera cradle so the camera can sit on a Kodak printer (alternative to wireless)
and print directly without the use of a computer.
| Effective
Pixels |
4.0 Million mega pixels |
| Image
Sizes |
4
Sizes |
| 4:3
Aspect Ratio |
Yes,
at 3.2 mega pixels |
| Lens
- zoom wide [mm] |
36mm
(35mm equivalent ) |
| Lens
-zoom tele [mm] |
108mm
(35mm equivalent ) |
| Lens
- Optical Zoom |
Yes,
3.3x |
| Resolution
Settings |
From
1136 x 856 to 2304 x 1728 |
| Shooting
Modes |
16
Scene / Manual / Auto |
| Manual
Focus |
No |
| Auto
Focus |
Yes
|
| Focus
Range [cm] |
60cm
to infinity |
| Aperture
Range |
F2.9
- F8.1 |
| Aperture
Priority |
No |
| Macro |
Yes |
| Macro
Range [cm] |
10cm
- infinity |
| Shutter
Speeds |
4
seconds - 1/1400 |
| Shutter
Priority |
No |
| ISO |
80,
160, 200 and 400 |
| LCD
Monitor |
Yes |
| LCD
Size |
3
inch TFT LCD colour monitor |
| Viewfinder |
No
|
| Flash |
3
mode options plus auto and on/off |
| Hot
Shoe |
No |
| White
balance |
4
options |
| Self
Timer |
Yes,
2 - 30 seconds |
| Movie
Options |
Yes.
Limited only by memory card size. |
| Video
Out |
Yes.
AV out. NTSC / PAL |
| Storage
Type |
SD/MMC
Cards |
| Storage
Included [Mb] |
Onboard
memory, 256Mb |
| Image
/ Audio Formats |
Jpeg / Motion Jpeg |
| Connectivity |
USB. |
| Power
Source |
2x Kodak Lithium-Ion
batteries & 1x charger |
| Battery
Options |
Rechargable
battery |
| Dimensions |
103mm
x 63mm x 26mm |
| Weight |
225g
without battery or card |
| Appearance
rating |
4.5
stars |
| Functionality
rating |
4
stars |
| RRP
(AUD) |
$899 AUD |
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