Typical price: £160
What is it: 10.2-megapixel compact with 24mm wide-angle lens
What we think: Engaging interface, excellent images and spirited manual controls make this understated compact a great investment
Samsung NV24HD Review
Reviewed on: 10 July 2008
Samsung's NV series is known for its solid build quality and unconventional smart touch interface. If those rows of buttons have put you off in the past, the 10.2-megapixel Samsung NV24HD could change your mind. This well-built snapper costs around £160.
Design
The NV24 is controlled by the NV series' familiar smart touch interface. The rows of buttons lining the bottom and right side of the 64mm (2.5-inch) screen may look intimidating, but give them a go: it's actually highly intuitive and does away with wading through menus.
You simply choose the setting you want to adjust by pressing the relevant button in one row, then go to the other axis and press the button for your adjustment. The absence of full-screen menus also means it's possible to preview your changes on screen as you tweak. The buttons are also touch sensitive. This means that some options, such as manual exposure, can be tweaked by brushing your fingertip lightly across the buttons.
Another clever addition is that the USB cable connects to a plug, so you can charge the camera via USB and only need one cable for both charging and image transfer. We're less impressed with the diminutive zoom paddle, unfortunately.
Unusually, the NV24 boasts two mode dials, one on each shoulder. The usual scene modes, manual and automatic options can be selected by the dial on the top right, while a second dial on the left side selects different colour modes. These include vivid, soft, cool and forest colour casts.
We didn't really get much use out of this -- giving, say, white balance its own dial may have been more useful -- but it does at least allow for quick changes into black and white or oversaturated colour.
Features
Attention to detail in the interface continues with the icons on slider scales showing what the effects of your changes will be. When adjusting the shutter speed slider to a faster speed, the icon -- a little man -- is crisp and sharp, only to blur as you make the shutter slower. We're not sure what's going on with the flat grey menu background, however; it might look cool with the classy black body, but combined with our dull silver model, the effect was too Soviet.
Optical image stabilisation and face detection -- which can find, focus and expose for up to nine faces -- are included. The maximum sensitivity is ISO 3,200, but as always, you should handle this kind of ISO speed with caution.
What we're really excited about is the NV24's titular feature: 24mm focal length, equivalent to a 35mm camera. This means images will be wider than the average compact camera, which are usually in the region of 35mm. The NV24 is even wider than cameras with a still decent 28mm wide angle. The lens also extends to a 3.6x optical zoom.
Another titular feature is the HD element of the NV24. HD stills are common place now and a slight fudge when HD resolution is a fraction of the average camera's capability. But actual high-definition video is much rarer, and the NV24 shoots 1,280x720-pixel footage at 30 frames per second.
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 NV24HD
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
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-TX1
As a showcase for Sony technology, it's brilliant, but it's far from perfect in everyday use
Olympus mju Tough-6010
It's not the best rugged camera available, but it does offer good value for money
Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZX1
This is a great little camera, but the Lumix DMC-TZ6 and DMC-TZ7 are similarly priced and more versatile
on Digital Cameras
Ricoh GXR offers bonkers new lens-swapping camera system
Ricoh has unveiled the GXR camera system, which introduces the novel system of swapping sealed lens units. Read on -- we'll explain
More:







