Typical price: £140
What is it: Quick performing 8-megapixel compact
What we think: Generally good picture quality make the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W90 a solid choice
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-W90 Review
Reviewed on: 27 February 2008
Sony pushes its Cyber-shot W-series forward by steps, not leaps or bounds, with the DSC-W90. This £140, 8-megapixel point-and-shoot camera offers a higher resolution than its predecessor, the
Design
From the outside, the W90 looks almost indistinguishable from its 7-megapixel little brother. Its slim metal body measures less than 23mm thick and weighs only 155g with battery and Memory Stick Duo. Unfortunately, just like the W80, its small, flat buttons can feel uncomfortable to large-thumbed users.
Features
Along with the same design, the W90 shares a nearly identical feature set with the W80. The 8-megapixel camera uses a 35-105mm equivalent, f/2.8-5.2 lens, giving it a standard 3x zoom range. Its 64mm (2.5-inch) LCD screen isn't huge by today's standards, but it offers a decent view and leaves enough room on the camera for an optical viewfinder.
Despite being part of Sony's budget line, the W90 incorporates a 9-point autofocus system and a face detection mode, both useful when your subject is not in the center of the frame. The W90 also includes 31MB of internal memory, enough to hold a few dozen photos or about a minute and a half of fair-quality VGA footage. Invest in a Memory Stick Duo to get any shooting longevity out of this camera.
As with the W80, a generous suite of onboard retouching options help offset the W90's cookie-cutter feature set. Once you've taken a picture, you can crop it, rotate it (in 90-degree increments) or remove red eyes from portraits taken with the camera's flash. It even offers a handful of picture effects, like soft focus, fisheye and cross filter. Most of these retouches feel more like gimmicks than actual useful features, but they can still be fun to play with.
Performance
In our tests, the W90 fared similar to the W80, with a quicker shutter but otherwise slightly slower performance. After a 1.7-second wait from power-on to first shot, the W90 could capture a new picture every 1.3 seconds with the onboard flash disabled.
With the flash turned on, that wait more than doubled to 3 seconds. That's slower than we like to see, even for a budget point-and-shoot. The shutter lagged a scant 0.4 seconds with our high-contrast target, and a respectable 1.1 seconds with our low-contrast target. In burst mode, the camera captured 15 full-resolution shots in 7.4 seconds for an average rate of 2 frames per second.
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