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Casio EX-Z200 Digital Camera

 
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The high resolution, 10.1 megapixel EXILIM Zoom EX-Z200 featurea an EXILIM series first — a 4x optical zoom lens that can shoot as wide as 28 mm (equivalent). Also, in addition to the usual recognition technologies, the intelligence of this camera has been enhanced. It incorporates automatic scene differentiation and allows the shutter to be released automatically. This camera also includes CCD shift anti shake function.

Product Features

  • 10.1 megapixel
  • 4x optical zoom lens that can shoot as wide as 28 mm (equivalent)
  • Automatic scene differentiation
  • CCD shift anti shake function

Product Specs

Megapixels

10.1

LCD Monitor

2.7-inch wide TFT color LCD (Super Clear LCD), 230,160 dots (959×240)

Power Source/Battery

Rechargeable lithium ion battery (NP-40) x 1

Dimensions 3.66” (W) x 2.16” (H) x 0.86” (D)
Thinnest Part: .76”
Weight 4.2 oz
Image Resolution

Still Images: 3648 x 2736, 3648 x 2432 (3:2), 3648 x 2048 (16:9), 3072 x 2304, 2304 x 1728, 1600 x 1200, 640 x 480

Movies: 848 × 480 (UHQ Wide/HQ Wide), 640 × 480 (UHQ/HQ/Normal), 320 × 240 (LP)

Storage Media

SDHC Memory Card, SD Memory Card, MultiMediaCard, MultiMediaCard plus compatible

Lens Features

Construction: 11 lenses in 10 groups, including aspherical lens

F-number: F3.2 (W) to F5.7 (T)

Focal Length: f=4.3 to 43.0mm

35mm Film Equivalent: Approx. 24mm ultra-wide to 240mm tele.

Auto Focus Approx. 15.75” to Infinity (W)

Casio EX-Z200’s Review

engadget.com

05/15/08

Casio’s Exilim EX-Z200, which broke cover at CES earlier this year, has been taken in to review by the shutterbugs over at PhotographyBLOG. Sporting a 10-megapixel sensor, 4x optical zoom and a 28-millimeter wide-angle lens, this pocket-friendly point-and-shoot proved to be a love / hate affair in its finest form. Despite being loaded with features and relatively easy to operate, the Z200 still delivered subpar image quality; more specifically, noise and smearing of fine details were quite evident even at ISO 200, purple fringing was obvious in high-contrast scenes and the painfully slow shutter speed left critics woefully underwhelmed. Overall, the digicam seemed to stumble in the areas that matter most, and with the plethora of alternatives out there, it sounds as if your hard-earned dollars could be better used elsewhere.

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