The best touchscreen cameras
Round-up reviews let you compare four related products and find out which one is best for you
Round-up by: Rich Trenholm
Last updated: 05 Dec 2008
Some predicted that in this millennium we'd all be wearing jetpacks and shiny jumpsuits. Well, that hasn't happened yet, but one thing we do have that tells us we're getting our futuristic on is the touchscreen. The iPhone has shown how a well-executed touchscreen can create a great user interface, and touchscreens are now showing up on digital cameras.
Compact cameras are, in theory, a perfect fit for touchscreens. They need to balance easy controls with large screens without increasing the overall size so much that they get too big for your pocket. The obvious way of doing this is to combine screen and controls.
Touchscreens work by adding icons to your camera screen, which call up menus or options when you tap on them with your finger. You can then scroll through menus or adjust the options you want to change. The beauty of touchscreens is that they provide context-specific options for each adjustment. So while a button can only be pressed, a touchscreen can call up a menu, or a slider, or a range of options. When adjusting parameters like exposure, dragging your finger up and down a slider is much more intuitive than clicking a button. A more practical factor is that the illuminated controls can be seen in the dark, instead of having to peer at the labels on buttons.
Some people are still ambivalent about touchscreens, however. They need to be fast and precise for users to trust them. There is also a fine line between icons being large enough to comfortably tap, and small enough to not clutter up a screen. Then there's the eternal complaint about finger-marks on the screen! But as we know that all our Crave readers have nice clean hands, we've rounded up four of our favourite compact cameras that have that special touch.
Edited by Cristina Psomadakis
Compare Products
![]() Samsung NV100HD |
![]() Panasonic Lumix DMC-FX500 |
![]() Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T700 |
![]() Kodak EasyShare V1073 |
|
| Review date | 1 Dec 08 | 18 Jun 08 | 22 Aug 08 | 20 Jun 08 |
| Editors' rating |
|
|
|
|
| Price range | £192.71 |
£250 | £140 | |
| Review summary | As long as you don’t set too much store by the 14.7 million pixels and HD movie mode, you will not be disappointed by the NV100HD. It looks great, handles well and has enough technology to impress even your geekiest mates. With super-fast AF and great colour rendition, it’s a perfect snapper Read full review |
Panasonic does it again with the cracking Lumix DMC-FX500, a point-and-shoot with a great lens, large and responsive touchscreen and a list of features as long as your arm Read full review |
Part smart-looking snapshot camera, part 4GB portable digital photo album, the Sony Cyber-shot DSC-T700 will satisfy those who like showing off their pictures as much as they like taking them Read full review |
The Kodak EasyShare V1073 is the best example we've seen for trying a camera before buying it online. Smouldering urban looks and rock-solid build quality aside, this Kodak is pain to use and delivers only average images. HD-style movies are better, but watch out for a sting in the tail -- that £70 HDTV dock Read full review |
| User rating | ||||
| Form factor | Compact | Compact | Ultracompact | Compact |
| Size (W x H x D) | 95 x 60 x 20 mm | 95 x 57 x 23 mm | 97 x 61 x 18 mm | 93 x 58 x 21 mm |
| Weight | 138 g | 175 g | 160 g | 148 g |
| Sensor resolution | 14.7 megapixels | 10.1 megapixels | 10.1 megapixels | 10 megapixels |
| Lens type | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom |
| Focal length | 6-21.6 mm | 4.4-22 mm | 6.18-24.7 mm | n/a |
| Equivalent 35mm focal length | 28-102 mm | 25-125 mm | n/a | 37-111 mm |
| Optical zoom | 3.9 x | 5 x | n/a | 3 x |
| Flash type | Pop-up | Built-in | Built-in | Built-in |
| Expansion slots | 1 SD memory card | SD/MMC/SDHC card | n/a | SDHC/SD card expansion slot |
| Full specification | Full specification | Full specification | Full specification |
Want to compare other products?
You can choose up to four products to compare on the Compare Products page






