Typical price: £110
What is it: Budget 7-megapixel compact with high sensitivity
What we think: It has respectable performance for its class, but just can't compete
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S700 Review
Reviewed on: 22 November 2007
Given the budget Cyber-shot DSC-S700's position at the rock-bottom of Sony's 2007 camera line, all you should really expect from it is the ability to take usable photos with minimal fuss. And by those standards, it passes muster. Just.
Design
Compact and weighing 130g, the S700 fits comfortably in a jacket pocket. It uses a typical control layout: the mode dial and power switch sit on top, while on the back you'll find a zoom rocker; four-way-plus-enter switch for exposure compensation, flash, macro and self-timer; and image quality/delete, review, display and menu buttons.
All these controls are large enough -- the 61mm (2.4-inch) LCD leaves plenty of space for them along with a small thumb grip -- and it's pretty comfortable to shoot one-handed. However, the buttons all feel flat and hard to push, while the navigation switch doesn't always seem to register presses. Like many of its classmates, the S700 lacks an optical viewfinder, and there are times in bright sunlight that the LCD becomes unreadable.
Features
Feature wise, there's not much to the 7-megapixel S700. As with many budget options, it sports a relatively slow, narrow-angle lens, in this case an f2.8-4.8 35-105mm 3x zoom.
From within the menus you can choose from some colour effects, spot or evaluative metering, several white-balance presets, sensitivity up to ISO 1,000, Fine or Standard compression quality, sharpness, flash compensation and single or burst shooting.
Performance
Compared with many low-budget models, the S700 performs pretty well. It powers on and shoots in just under 2 seconds. In good light when there are no contrast problems to challenge the autofocus, it focuses and shoots in 0.8 seconds -- tolerable, but not great.
But when the lights dim and contrast decreases, shutter lag increases just a bit to 1.1 seconds, which is very good for its class. It typically takes about 1.8 seconds to shoot two consecutive frames, which jumps to a reasonable 2.5 seconds when flash comes into play. The S700 provides a limited three-shot burst mode that shoots at around 1.4-1.6fps, depending upon file size and quality settings.
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 Sony Cyber-shot DSC-S700
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
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
Samsung ST1000
Good camera made great by its excellent touchscreen interface and wireless technology
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:




