Kodak EasyShare C743 review

Asia.cnet has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C743.digital camera.

Will Greenwald writes: Like most budget cameras, the C743’s feature set delivers just the basics. With a standard 3x zoom lens (37mm to 111mm-equivalent), a 30fps VGA movie mode, and a handful of image presets, the C743 bears all the standard features of a low-end point-and-shoot camera.



Kodak EasyShare C743 7.1MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare V803 digital camera Review

Pocket-lint has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare V803 digital camera.

Doug Harman writes: The V803 bucks a trend in terms of the level of detail captured for high-resolution compact digital cameras (that – normally – over processes noise and detail) its pictures look great.

It is also inexpensive at a penny under £150, but while it looks nice, is well made, has some nice features, and is simple to operate, its problems with all those frustrating delays means, in the end, I cannot recommend this camera.



Kodak EasyShare V803 8MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare C743 review

Imaging-resource has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C743 digital camera.

Dan Havlik writes: On paper, the Kodak EasyShare C743 seems like a steal. With a bargain basement price of under $160, the camera offers a good feature set including a 7.1 megapixel imaging sensor, a Kodak-branded 3x optical zoom lens with a 37-111mm equivalent focal range, and a 2.4-inch LCD along with a real-image optical viewfinder — an increasingly rare option on compact digital cameras these days. Like most of Kodak’s cameras, I found the C743 to be very easy to use with relatively good speed for basic
snapshooting.



Kodak EasyShare C743 7.1MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare C875 review

Imaging-resource has posted a  review of the Kodak EasyShare C875 digital camera.

Dan Havlik writes:The Kodak EasyShare C875 is the kind of camera I would only recommend to beginners. While it does offer advanced manual control in the PASM settings, this is really a model designed for people who don’t want to think too much about how to take pictures, and just take them. The Kodak C875’s smart scene mode function is a great concept that produced nice if sometimes curious choices, with the camera often picking unexpected scene modes that, for the most part, helped capture better images.

During the day in good sunlight, the Kodak C875’s 8 megapixel imaging sensor and 5x optical zoom lens produced very good quality images with robust color, fine detail, and good sharpness all the way to the corners. In more challenging lighting conditions however, such as when shooting indoors or under overcast skies, the Kodak C875 struggled with an underpowered flash. It surprised us with its good high ISO performance, though, so we’re dropping it back into the lab for a full test.



Kodak EasyShare C875 8MP Digital Camera with 5x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare C643 review

Asia.cnet has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C643 digital camera.

Will Greenwald writes: The Kodak EasyShare C643 performed decently in our tests. After a speedy 2.7-second wake-up time, we recorded a shot-to-shot rate of 1.8 seconds, increasing to just 2 seconds with the flash enabled. We experienced shutter lags of 0.6 and 1.1 seconds, respectively, for our high- and low-contrast targets, which are typical for this camera class. The camera can fire off only three-shot bursts, albeit at a speedy rate of 2.2 frames per second.



Kodak EasyShare C643 6.1MP Digital Camera with 3X Optical Zoom & EasyShare Series 3 printer dock

Kodak EasyShare C875 review

Asia.cnet has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C875 digital camera.

Will Greenwald writes: The Kodak EasyShare C875 offers high-end features for a comparably low price. It doesn’t have any extreme gimmicks besides its 5x zoom lens and manual exposure controls, but it produces very good photos and shows good performance. The C875 is a solid choice for any user seeking a balance between features, image quality, and price.



Kodak EasyShare C875 8MP Digital Camera with 5x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare C743

Reviews.cnet has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C743 digital camera.

Will Greenwald writes: Though the Kodak EasyShare C743’s price is low, its flimsy build and incredibly noisy images disappoint even in the bargain bin. If you really want an inexpensive point-and-shoot camera, skip the C743 and look at the Olympus FE-190 or the Canon PowerShot A540. The Olympus feature a slim, stylish body and simple shooting, while the Canon offers a generous handful of manual controls to tweak your images. For the same price, the Kodak EasyShare C743 offers neither.



Kodak EasyShare C743 7.1MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare C433 Digital Camera Review

Digitalcamerainfo has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare C433 Digital Camera.

James Murray writes: The Kodak EasyShare C433 is definitely a camera that excels in the ease of use category. This is primarily due to Kodak’s decision to strip external controls down to the necessary basics. In addition to the reduction to essential basics, the external controls are generally large in size and labeled with either full text or simple icons. The construction of the menu structures in both shooting and playback modes are full text and easy to understand and can be navigated through the use of the
large and well-positioned four-way controller.



Kodak EasyShare C433 4MP Digital Camera with 3x Optical Zoom

 
 

Kodak EasyShare Z710 digital camera Review

Pocket-lint has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare Z710 digital camera. They write: The Z710 is pricey for what it is, it has some odd flaws in design such as that maddening flash/on/off button and it has a build, best politely described as “plasticy”.

The camera’s resolution should allow prints up to A3 but there simply is not enough detail to support such a size, add to that some barrel distortion at the wide end of the zoom and purple fringing around high-contrast areas and I have to say that I cannot recommend this camera.

For £100 pounds, this might make someone a reasonable budget snapper, but for £200 there are simply far to many other good cameras on the market that are streets ahead to make buying this one an option.



Kodak EasyShare Z710 7.1MP Digital Camera with 10x Optical Zoom

Kodak EasyShare V610 digital camera review

Pcmag has posted a review of the Kodak EasyShare V610 digital camera.

Terry Sullivan writes: I am less impressed with the V610’s resolution. It averaged just 1,450 lines, which is on the low side for a 6MP camera. Like the other Kodak V-series camera, the V610 boots up in just under 2 seconds and can recycle in 1.7 seconds. This is one zippy camera. I found little shutter lag. There was no pincushion distortion and just a little barrel distortion, which is excellent for an ultracompact. Unfortunately, unlike other superzooms, the 610 has
no image stabilization for still images.



Kodak EasyShare V610 6MP Digital Camera with 10x Dual-Lens Optical Zoom

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