Typical price: £250
What is it: 10-megapixel ultracompact camera and photo album
What we think: A top-of-the-range compact with innovative features and a gorgeous design
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T700 Review
Reviewed on: 22 August 2008
Think about how often you show digital photos to your friends, either on your mobile phone or camera's LCD. Now think about how miserable the experience is trying to find an image on that camera or phone, how frequently you don't have the photo you really want to show, and how pathetically small and visually underwhelming the display is for the task.
Sony's Cyber-shot DSC-T700 aims to improve this picture-sharing experience by giving consumers not only a well-rounded point-and-shoot camera, but also a portable digital photo album able to store up to 40,000 images and view them on an 89mm (3.5-inch) LCD screen. And we're pleased to say: it succeeds. It's out in September for around £250.
The T700 replaces the
Along with improvements made to the LCD's picture quality (921,000 pixels up from 230,000) the T700's internal memory jumps from 15MB to 4GB -- 3.7GB available for photo storage -- as well as support for up to a 16GB Memory Stick Duo Pro card. The internal storage combined with the touchscreen LCD and the bundled Sony Picture Motion Browser software is what turns the camera into a digital photo album.
Design
Measuring a little more than 15mm thick and weighing 160g, the T700 is ultraslim and light. We tested a brushed silver version, but it's available in grey, red, pink and gold, too. The camera has an elegant feel with a full metal body on the front and sides, and nothing but screen on the back. In fact, the only physical controls are the power and shutter buttons on top and the well-positioned zoom rocker at the right corner. The only other button is a small Playback mode button at the top right of the display.
On the bottom is the battery/Memory Stick compartment, a proprietary connector for use with the included USB/AV cable, and a tripod mount. To take a picture you simply slide down the flat, metal lens cover and click away. You'll want to be careful of errant fingers getting in shots and touching the lens, however, as the lens is positioned at the far left.
Sony's high-contrast Xtra Fine display is quite good. At its Normal brightness setting, we had no problem seeing the screen in direct sunlight. Well, no problem after wiping away fingerprints -- the T700 seems to collect more than most. If having to wipe off fingerprints is a deal-breaker, you'll want to skip this camera and probably all touchscreen models for that matter -- of which there are more and more.
Aside from fingerprints, you might take issue with the touchscreen's responsiveness. We found the T700's to be fine with fingers, but better with the included stylus (or 'Paint Pen' as Sony calls it), probably because we could be more precise with it. It clips on to the wrist strap and allows you to quickly poke around the three onscreen menus (Home, Menu and Display) along with the in-camera retouching and painting tools (you can add stamps, frames or draw on pictures) all while keeping the screen free of fingerprints.
Features
Navigating the camera settings is easy enough. The Home menu gives you access to all the main features and options, while the Menu screen provides context-sensitive options. For instance, if you're taking still pictures, you get all the shooting choices such as scene modes and resolutions. The T700 offers ten scene modes -- including a new Gourmet option for shooting food -- as well as the typical auto features.
Sony has updated its Smile Shutter function so that it continues to automatically shoot pictures of people smiling until you tell it not to, but still lets you take single shots with the shutter button. There are three smile sensitivity levels as well. The iSCN Intelligent Scene Recognition now selects the best mode from eight scene modes up from five previously, and there's an advanced mode that will take a picture with the current settings plus an additional shot with optimised settings if need be (nothing like being second-guessed by your electronics). The company added an antiblink iSCN, too, which will automatically take a second picture if it senses closed eyes. All of these worked well.
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