Price range: £187.98 - £299.00
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What is it: 12.1-megapixel, touchscreen compact with 5x zoom
What we think: Disappointing. The hybrid touchscreen interface is lacklustre overall, and the lens isn't that good
Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX550 Review
Reviewed on: 28 October 2009
The 12.1-megapixel Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX550's neat little metal body oozes hi-tech features and offers a surprising amount of manual control. You also get a 76mm (3-inch) touchscreen, a 5x super-wide zoom equivalent to 25-125mm, and a high-definition movie mode. That doesn't sound too bad for just £225 or so.
Top-notch construction
As usual, this Panasonic camera's build quality is beyond reproach. The DMC-FX550 feels like a classy piece of kit right from the start. The first sign of the touchscreen interface is an 'AFAE' button in the bottom right-hand corner of the screen. You tap this, then tap on the object you want to focus on. The DMC-FX550 doesn't just focus on it, it tracks it around the screen if it or the camera moves.

The touchscreen display comes into play again if you press the 'mode' button on the back. This displays a bunch of big on-screen icons for the 'intelligent auto', 'my scene', 'scene', program auto-exposure, aperture-priority, shutter-priority, manual and motion-picture modes. It's unusual to get all these modes in a little compact like this.

If you decide you want to shoot in manual mode, the screen displays sliders for adjusting the shutter speed and aperture. You 'drag' them with your thumb. If you want to make adjustments to the ISO, white balance or other everyday settings, you press the 'Q.Menu' button. That gives you a horizontal set of on-screen buttons for the parameters you can change, and a vertical set for the setting. Overall, this system is pretty quick, effective and reliable, although dragging the virtual sliders can be a hit-and-miss affair.
Redundant touchscreen?
But does this touchscreen interface do anything you couldn't do just as easily with directional buttons? In other words, is it really necessary? Panasonic describes it as a 'hybrid' interface, and it doesn't entirely replace the standard controls since many of the adjustments can be made with the directional buttons too. We have to admit to being spoiled by the Samsung ST550 and its 'haptic' interface, which delivers a tiny vibration through your finger when you press on the screen. The DMC-FX550's touchscreen seems rather vague and lacklustre by comparison.
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