Sony may not be the first manufacturer to enter the hard drive camcorder market -- that distinction goes to JVC's Everio models. But with excellent video quality and fluid operation, the Sony Handycam DCR-SR100 puts all but the more expensive JVC 500 series models -- as well as Sony's own DVD-based models -- to shame.
Video quality still can't quite match that of similarly priced MiniDV models, and MPEG-2 video degrades on editing, but you certainly won't be embarrassed by the holiday videos you shoot with it, and there's always the cool factor. Make sure you can live with the touch-screen interface before you commit, though.
Design
The Sony Handycam DCR-SR100 seems designed around the constraints of its long, wide 10x zoom lens and the 69mm- (2.7-inch-) wide touch-screen LCD -- it's a squat, squared-off cylinder that's odd looking but not unattractive. It feels quite solid and comfortable to hold -- not too heavy at 590g -- but it's big enough to require a carrying case.


We've complained before about Sony's touch-screen interface -- that it's simply annoying on a large LCD and close to unusable on a small one such as the DCR-SR100's. It's full of tiny buttons and the touch screen itself is prone to smudges and fingerprints. Tweak-happy users will find themselves either cursing this camera or praying for a stylus. If you like the touch screen, however, then you can kick the SR100's design rating up by a point. The left bezel sports duplicate zoom and record buttons, though they're neither responsive nor very useful.
Features
As befitting its price class, Sony put some nice finishing touching on the DCR-SR100, including an automatic lens cover and a snug accessory shoe protector. Although it might sound trivial, that lens cover eliminates a significant speed bump when you're shooting. Like JVC's Everio models, the Sony Handycam DCR-SR100 records directly to a hard drive. Its 30GB drive can store as much as 440 minutes of high-quality video, 1,250 minutes of low-quality video, or 10,000 3-megapixel still images.
You can play the video directly on a TV via the bundled composite cable or copy the files to your PC -- the camcorder mounts as a hard drive via a USB 2.0 connection. Like DVD camcorders, hard drive camcorders record using MPEG-2, and Sony saves the files as media-player-readable MPG files. Your system -- Mac or PC -- may require a codec update in order to play or edit them, however.

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bigpapanoodle 26 February 2008
Good: Comfortable to handle, viewfinder
Bad: Not much really
Comment: Had been looking around for a long time for a hard-disc camcorder. I was at the end of my tether with my old JVC tape dinosaur - too many golden moments lost to waiting for the tape to load up then record. Worst of all, I kept getting error codes and then it would freeze up.
My first impression was how well it fitted my hand. So comfortable! Your hand was designed around this with all the buttons in easy reach of either your thumb or forefinger. Next thing was how quickly after switching it on it was ready to shoot. Press the toggle switch once and you are ready to start recording video. Press it again and its ready to take a still photo. Once again and you are in playback mode. Again and you are back to where you started...simple.
The colour viewfinder was always on my list of "must haves" and this was another deciding factor in choosing this camcorder. Nice to have the option of choosing screen or viewfinder I always feel.
The camcorder records to the MPEG2 format which can be a bit awkward to edit. The bundled software allows you to cut out unwanted scenes but not much more than that, sadly. I have managed to edit a short video in Windows Movie Maker but that is better suited to .avi files. Tended to get many screen freezes.
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