Typical price: £280
What is it: Compact digital camera with 12-megapixel sensor and 3.6x optical zoom
What we think: You can find better performing cameras with lower pixel counts for the same money
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX100 Review
Reviewed on: 23 July 2007
Superslim cameras, such as Casio's Exilim EX-Z75 or Sony's Cyber-shot DSC-T20 get plenty of attention on TV shows and in slick print magazines, but some people find their ultracompact bodies difficult to use. A camera with more to hold on to can make more sense. Panasonic's Lumix DMC-FX100 is a perfect example. It also happens to be Panasonic's entry into this year's 12-megapixel compact camera derby, joining the likes of Sony's Cyber-shot DMC-W200 and Casio's Exilim EX-Z1200.
This Panasonic distinguishes itself from those other two by including a zoom lens with a wider wide-angle setting -- 28mm (equivalent) instead of 36mm or 37mm. While it doesn't look as impressive as a larger telephoto zoom number, it'll be more useful when you're out shooting with your back to the wall.
Design
Panasonic follows the if-it-ain't-broke-don't-fix-it logic by keeping the body design essentially the same as that of their other FX-series cameras. The 3.6x optical, 28mm-to-100mm (equivalent), f/2.8-to-f/5.6 zoom lens extends from the front of the body when you turn the camera on and the zoom control takes the form of a ring around the shutter button, with a nub on the front that you can operate with your forefinger. The mode dial is built into the upper-right corner of the camera back, putting it out of the way but still convenient to use.
Five small buttons, located to the right of the 64mm (2.5-inch), 207,000-pixel LCD on the camera back, double as menu controls and quick controls for functions including exposure compensation (plus or minus 2EV in one-third-stop steps), self-timer, flash and review (in case you don't want to switch to full-on playback mode on the mode dial). Below these buttons are two small, round buttons for display controls and function/delete.
The only other hard controls are the on/off slider and E.Zoom button, both on the camera top. This last one brings you to the far end of the optical zoom with the first press, adds digital zoom to bring you to a 7x zoom on the second press, and back to the widest angle on the third press. Of course, if you start at the far end of the zoom, the first press will bring you to the 7x (with digital) zoom, and so on. Be careful though, since this button will cycle through the digital zoom even if you have it turned off in the menus.
Features
Like many compact cameras, the FX100 doesn't have manual exposure controls, though it does include 20 preset scene modes to help you deal with difficult -- or just plain unusual -- shooting conditions. A pair of features helps you deal with blur. Panasonic's Mega OIS lens-shift stabilisation helps combat hand shake, while Intelligent ISO control -- a separate shooting mode available on the mode dial -- analyses motion in your subject and automatically raises the ISO to a limit you select in the menu to help prevent blur caused by a fast-moving subject.
This can come in handy if you don't want to manually set ISO to boost your shutter speed. The camera will keep the ISO as low as possible if your subject is still, thereby minimising noise in your images when the lighting is suboptimal.
Like past FX models, you can also choose from 4:3, 3:2, or 16:9 aspect ratios in case you prefer to view your images on a TV or a digital photo frame instead of making prints. You can also select 4:3 or 16:9 ratios when capturing movies, though you're limited to 15 frames per second if you opt for 1,280x720-pixel video.
Performance
The DMC-FX100 showed good shutter lag times but was otherwise no more than average in our performance tests. The camera took a slightly sluggish 2.4 seconds to start up and capture its first JPEG image. Subsequent JPEGs took 2.3 seconds between shots with the flash turned off, slowing a bit further to 2.9 seconds with the flash on.
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