Sony's T series has seen many iterations, but not necessarily improvements. In early 2007, Sony released the
The T300 is fast, includes even more features than the T200 and for £270, ups the resolution from 8 to 10 megapixels. Unfortunately, its photos look even worse than the T200's.
Design
At a casual glance, the T300 looks almost identical to its predecessor. At just 94 by 59 by 21mm and weighing 177g with battery and Memory Stick Duo, it's slightly thinner and lighter than the T200. Underneath its stylish, slim body and signature sliding lens cover, though, the T300 received some important tweaks for the T200's faults.

Besides its stylish sliding lens cover -- a signature feature on all Cyber-shot T-series cameras -- the T300's display stands out as its most notable feature. You control almost every aspect of the camera via a 89mm (3.5-inch) touchscreen LCD, leaving just a power button, a playback button, a shutter release and a zoom rocker as its only physical controls.
The screen dominates the entire back panel of the camera, barely leaving half a centimetre around it for the bezel. On the bright side, this huge screen gives you a large, bright view of your pictures and the menus. On the other hand, it leaves almost no room for your thumb to rest while shooting. A large, sturdy lanyard mount on the right side of the camera offers some space, but big thumbs will still tend to brush against the touchscreen.
Even if you can shoot without accidentally tapping the screen, you're still going to have to delve into the camera's menu system at some point. The menus aren't just irritating -- they're downright neurotic and take far too long to navigate, requiring constant reassurance with countless taps of "OK". Change the resolution, hit "OK". Change the white balance, hit "OK". Enter the camera settings menu by hitting "OK", then confirm each setting by hitting "OK" again.
Features
As Sony's highest-end point-and-shoot, the T300 includes all the latest features. It sports an optically stabilised f/3.5-4.4, 33-165mm-equivalent 5x zoom lens that delivers a surprisingly long reach for a slim camera. Unfortunately, that reach comes at the cost of wide angle and speed. A 28mm, f/2.8 lens would have been preferable, even if it didn't offer a 5x zoom.
The T300 also features several face-detection shooting modes, including Adult and Child Priority, which let the camera identify kids' or adults' faces in group photos and adjust focus and exposure accordingly, and Smile Shutter, which delays shooting until the subject smiles.
User reviews1
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Gaurav Choudhary 22 August 2008
Good: Look and slimness is good.
Bad: The most important thing - the picture that it takes
Comment: Hopeless camera. It is same like worst thing wrapped by different glitters so that bad things can be hidden. No feature is useful as what ever setting you do when you see picture, its hopless. Support was even worst, I really missed review of CNET. It very true that images comes out with noice and at ISO3200 you won't be able to judge what you have shot. Genuine advice ignore SONY as SLR are also not upto the mark. I am one of the victim of SONY you just ignore. If you see rating of SONY products they are detiriorating and SONY is trying to earn only on its Brand name.
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