Typical price: £300
What is it: Compact digital camera with 5.1-megapixel sensor and 12x optical zoom
What we think: An amazing array of features, but mediocre photo quality mitigates its appeal
Kodak EasyShare P850 Review
Reviewed on: 24 November 2005
Second from the top of Kodak's lineup, the 5.1-megapixel EasyShare P850 offers more features than you normally find in digital cameras on the company's roster. Those features include a 36mm-to-432mm lens (35mm equivalent), image stabilisation (for the 12x zoom), manual-exposure adjustments and controls for contrast, saturation, and even white-balance compensation. Even so, the Kodak EasyShare P850 is comparatively pricey -- the 8-megapixel, wide-angle EasyShare P880 costs only about £80 more. Still, the P850 offers enough sophistication and flexibility for enthusiasts while maintaining its EasyShare simplicity for those who may eventually want to graduate to manual adjustments.
Design
Despite its lopsided look, the Kodak EasyShare P850 feels well balanced. At 437g with its slender rechargeable battery and SD card installed, it weighs just enough to feel substantial but not heavy. A 64mm (2.5-inch) LCD occupies about two-thirds of the camera back -- buttons and dials are scattered over the rest, as well as the top. At first, you might question the choice of external controls, but they make the camera quite usable, thanks to the combination of a highly customisable Program button and a command dial that scrolls through onscreen options such as aperture, shutter speed, ISO and exposure compensation.
The design has some faults, however. The power lever on top of the grip is awkwardly designed and difficult to use. The proprietary battery lacks a latch to keep it from falling out when the cover is open, and it slides easily into the slot even when inserted incorrectly.
Features
But those flaws are minor in light of this camera's many features -- some of which you usually find only on more expensive models and digital SLRs. They include three custom settings that you activate with the mode dial, the Program button, which accesses a long list of options in capture and playback modes, three- and five-shot exposure bracketing, three burst modes, support for raw and TIFF files, a whopping 25 user-selectable focus points, three custom white-balance functions, and colour-bias compensation. ISO sensitivity runs from 50 to 800; in manual modes, the camera can achieve shutter speeds as slow as 16 seconds.
On the playback side, you can convert a raw file to a JPEG or TIFF, quickly magnify photos up to 10x, save favourites, preview highlight and shadow clipping, and more. The camera's zoom also works while you're shooting movies, and the camera provides multiple editing options in playback.
Performance
As for performance, the Kodak EasyShare P850 was surprisingly peppy in burst mode, capturing five high-quality JPEGs at 3.5fps. Dropping down to basic JPEG quality increased the total number of shots to 30, but slowed the capture rate to about 2fps. We took sequential single shots at intervals of about 1.7 seconds -- a pretty good time -- and the flash recycled fairly quickly. But if you plan to save photos in TIFF or raw format, you'll wait up to 14 seconds between shots. And don't count on whipping out the P850 for quick, spontaneous snaps -- when you power up the camera, the lens takes a couple of seconds to extend, for a total delay of about 4 seconds.
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