Typical price: £180
What is it: Net sharing camcorder with swivel screen
What we think: The NSC-GC1 certainly looks stylish, but looks can't make up for lack of memory and poor design
Sony NSC-GC1 Review
Reviewed on: 3 October 2007
Every company wants to get a taste of YouTube's popularity, and Sony's no exception. In a jarring change from the company's Cyber-shot and Handycam lines of digital cameras and camcorders, Sony released the NSC-GC1 net sharing cam, a pocket camera/camcorder designed specifically for YouTube and its myriad Web video analogs.
At just £180, the GC1 aims squarely at casual users with more interest in style and simplicity than complex photography or video production.
Design
The GC1's rectangular black form features a glossy finish on one side and a matt finish on the other, giving its all-black colour scheme a two-tone appearance. It appears quite dapper, especially when held up against its drab
white competitors, like the RCA EZ105. Its 61mm (2.4-inch) LCD screen
flips open, and can pivot around 270 degrees, providing some
much-appreciated flexibility when shooting at odd angles, like over
crowds.

Besides its flip-out screen, the brick-shaped GC1 offers few ergonomic considerations and feels uncomfortable in the hand. A small plastic ridge on the front of the camera gives you a place to rest your forefinger while shooting, but at the cost of flash photography.
If you hold the GC1 with the plastic ridge between your forefinger and middle finger, your forefinger can easily obscure or outright block the camera's tiny flash. If you want to take photos in anything less than direct sunlight, you need to remember to choke your hand down to keep the flash visible.
The GC1's control scheme takes a similar misstep, with an unintuitive, confusing layout. A tiny joystick navigates the camera's sparse menu system, sitting in the middle of a circular grouping of four buttons. The little control nub alone feels awkward enough for large thumbs, and the cluster of buttons surrounding it only further hurt the interface.
The two controls together feel like a standard four-way-plus-OK joypad, and you'll probably spend a bit of time training yourself to use the joystick in the centre for both confirmation and navigation of the camera's menus, instead of uselessly tapping the buttons around the stick while trying to select menu options. The joystick and buttons also sit too high on the camera, forcing you to shift your hand up and causing your fingers to block the flash, as mentioned before.
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