Typical price: £200
What is it: 10-megapixel compact with touch sensor interface
What we think: It can produce some very nice-looking pictures, but its unique interface isn't for everyone
Samsung NV11 Review
Reviewed on: 19 October 2007
With matte black finishes, prominent, blue-ringed lenses and unusual touch sensor controls, Samsung's style-minded NV cameras are pretty hard to miss.
Sitting at the top of the NV heap is the NV11, a 195g, 10-megapixel camera that strikes just the right middle ground between the high-resolution, 3x zoom-equipped
Design
The NV11 completely forgoes conventional controls and instead uses Samsung's Smart Touch interface, found on every NV-series camera except last year's MP3-playing
Instead of a joy pad or touchscreen, the NV11 uses a series of touch sensor buttons along the bottom and right of its 69mm (2.7-inch) screen to navigate its various menus and settings. Slide a finger along the sensors to page through the camera's grid-like menu system. Once the cursor is over your menu selection, just press the touch sensor down like a button to confirm it.
With its rows of unmarked button/sensors, Smart Touch may seem intimidating at first. After a bit of practice, however, it becomes very intuitive, and makes accessing any of the camera's myriad settings quite easy.
Smart Touch isn't perfect, however, and it suffers from two major flaws. First, the sensor buttons sit too close to each other, and large-fingered users will find themselves often accidentally hitting the sensor next to the one they wanted to touch.
Second, while the sensors make navigating a menu grid quite easy, they're extremely awkward for paging through dozens of photos, or any other action that requires a menu slider. When looking at photos, navigating a zoomed-in picture or adjusting manual focus, you must either stroke the touch sensor repeatedly in one direction, or stroke it once and keep your finger pressed on the last sensor to keep the cursor scrolling.
Features
Besides its 10-megapixel sensor and 38-190mm-equivalent, f/2.8-4.4 5x optical Schneider zoom lens, the NV11 comes loaded with several high-end camera features. The camera offers full manual exposure controls, with program, aperture priority, shutter priority and manual modes.
As mentioned earlier, you can easily access manual focus in any of those modes and change your focus distance by sliding your finger over the touch sensor. While it doesn't have any manual or optical image stabilisation, the NV11 offers Samsung's Advanced Shake Reduction to help reduce blur by boosting ISO sensitivity and shutter speed when shooting zoomed in or under low light.
The NV11 also offers several snapshot-friendly features, for those who don't want to play with the camera's manual controls. You can choose from 11 preset scene modes, including the standard portrait, night and landscape settings.
Face-detection autofocus and auto exposure finds subjects' faces and adjusts focus and exposure settings accordingly. Face detection can be extremely valuable when taking family photos or portraits where the subjects are off-centre or when they're not the closest foreground objects in frame.
Performance
Though it performed okay in our tests, the
NV11 suffered from some minor quirks. After taking 2.4 seconds to start
up and capture its first image, the camera could fire off a new shot
every 2.3 seconds with the flash turned off. With the onboard flash
enabled, that time increased to 2.7 seconds.
The shutter lagged only 0.6 seconds with our high-contrast target and 1.2 seconds with our low-contrast target, which mimic bright and dim shooting conditions, respectively. Despite these otherwise respectable times, the shutter tends to feel unresponsive right after you turn on the camera.
Tell us what you think
Do you own this product? Want to share your experiences with other CNET UK users?
Write your own review of the Samsung NV11
Can't find the product you're looking for? Want to suggest a product for review?
Special Offers from our Sponsors
Latest Digital camera Reviews
Nikon Coolpix S570
Feels more expensive than it is, and its pictures are slightly better than usual for its class
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FP8
Not much to look at, but it's actually a very good ultra-compact camera for snapshooters
Samsung PL60
Stylish, practical and pleasing to use. Its pictures aren't bad either, so it's a good buy at this price
on Digital Cameras
Gimmicks are the new megapixels: The new generation of unusual digital cameras
In the last year we've seen cameras with projectors, 3D, Wi-Fi, GPS, swappable lenses, extra screens and new sensors. The megapixel race is over -- all hail the gimmick
More:




